Three of the most anticipated public listings in history — SpaceX, OpenAI and Anthropic — are converging on 2026, threatening to pull billions in liquidity from crypto markets as institutional and retail investors reallocate capital toward equity offerings.
"These IPOs represent a once-in-a-decade concentration of demand that will compete directly with alternative assets for marginal capital," said Tom Brennan, an IPO and M&A analyst at Edgen. "When a retail investor has $10,000 to deploy, a SpaceX allocation often wins over a Bitcoin position."
SpaceX's listing on June 12 raised more than $75 billion in the largest IPO in Wall Street history, with shares closing up 19% on debut and valuing Elon Musk's rocket company at more than $2 trillion, according to Forbes. The stock has since been included in the Nasdaq-100 with a roughly 1% weighting, and former Nasdaq Chairman Robert Greifeld estimated that lockup expirations could release as much as $800 billion of shares into the market.
Anthropic has confidentially filed a draft S-1 with the Securities and Exchange Commission and retained Freshfields as legal adviser, with Polymarket odds pricing a 75.5% probability of a listing by Dec. 31, 2026. OpenAI is also preparing for a public offering but may delay to 2027 amid market uncertainties, according to reports, with Polymarket assigning just a 21.5% chance of a 2026 IPO.
The capital rotation risk to Bitcoin is twofold. In the near term, the IPO pipeline absorbs liquidity that might otherwise flow into crypto: SpaceX alone raised $75 billion, and the combined haul across all three companies could exceed $150 billion if OpenAI and Anthropic list in 2026. Polymarket data shows the "Anthropic IPO by December 31" contract trading at 75.5 cents, implying strong market conviction in a 2026 debut.
The second-order effect cuts the other way. If these IPOs perform well, the newly created wealth — SpaceX's $2 trillion valuation created a wave of paper fortunes — could eventually rotate back into Bitcoin and other crypto assets. Tim Draper, the billionaire venture capitalist who was among SpaceX's earliest outside investors, told Forbes that "extraordinary returns come from embracing uncertainty," a philosophy that has also led him to back Musk's xAI over OpenAI and Anthropic.
SpaceX's aftermarket behavior offers a preview of the liquidity dynamics at play. The stock trades with an implied volatility of 92, roughly 3.5 times that of the Invesco QQQ Trust, and options activity remains heavily skewed bullish: more than 300,000 calls traded on a recent session versus fewer than 130,000 puts, according to ThinkOrSwim data cited by CNBC. That level of speculative demand in a single name illustrates the gravitational pull these listings exert on risk capital.
For Bitcoin, the immediate risk is a liquidity squeeze. The $75 billion raised in SpaceX's IPO alone represents roughly 3% of Bitcoin's current market capitalization. If OpenAI and Anthropic collectively raise a similar amount, the combined $150 billion would approach 6% of Bitcoin's market cap — a meaningful overhang for an asset class that has historically thrived on marginal capital inflows.
The counterargument is that crypto and equity investors are not perfectly overlapping cohorts. Bitcoin's core holder base — long-term believers in monetary sovereignty — is unlikely to liquidate positions for IPO allocations. But the marginal buyer, the swing trader and the momentum-driven retail investor who has driven much of crypto's recent price action, may prove more fickle.
What happens next depends on sequencing. If OpenAI confirms a 2026 listing, the three IPOs would cluster within a six-month window, intensifying the capital competition. If OpenAI delays to 2027, the pressure on Bitcoin eases into year-end. Polymarket's 21.5% pricing on a 2026 OpenAI IPO suggests the market currently expects a delay — but that leaves room for a surprise acceleration that could roil crypto markets.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.