If IPOs were once based on investor demand, this year’s IPOs show investor bewilderment instead. Prices are rising because participation seems to be getting harder to come by, not because fundamentals have significantly improved.
Like buses following a strike, new listings have started coming in all at once, louder than anticipated, and largely crammed. Many companies have planned their public debuts in recent quarters around a rare period of market optimism rather than operational readiness. Because of this urgency, appropriate pricing is quite challenging.
Offer-for-sale arrangements are a contributing factor. Valuation becomes a scoreboard rather than a funding event when insiders cash out but the business isn’t obtaining significant fresh capital. Even though it may not seem like much, that change gives investors a completely different message.
The impact of AI has been notably strong across industries. Businesses with even minor exposure to AI are receiving premium multiples, some of which are remarkably similar to internet startups from the early 2000s. These premiums go beyond optimism. They are speculative in a useful way.
The offering price of half of the 2025 IPOs listed was below by the end of March. The pitch decks, however, hardly ever include that figure. While many of these businesses relied largely on tales, they provided little information on profitability, scalability, or customer retention.
| Key Factors Influencing 2025 IPO Valuations | Details |
|---|---|
| Primary Sectors | AI, Cloud Infrastructure, FinTech, Consumer Tech |
| Common IPO Types | Offer-for-Sale (OFS), Limited Primary Fundraising |
| Market Volatility Factors | Tariff risks, AI hype, regional tension |
| Post-IPO Performance Split | Nearly 50% trading below issue price |
| Global Divergence | India: high P/E; Europe: cautious pricing |
| Source for Trends | EY Global IPO Trends Q3 2025 |

I saw a venture partner refer to one debut as “a PowerPoint valuation wrapped in a pricing algorithm” during a breakfast panel in Berlin. He didn’t sound contemptuous, but rather amused.
The valuation mist is being exacerbated by retail investors. IPO access is now dangerously seamless and unexpectedly cheap thanks to platforms. When social media buzz and one-click bidding are combined, prices rise much above what revenue or earnings might support.
Day-one performance is now a less accurate indicator of health because of this. Momentum trading or underlying confidence can both be reflected in a 40% increase. These are not evaluations of long-term worth, but rather exhilarating experiences.
India has enthusiastically welcomed new listings, especially in consumer and AI platforms. Due to the lack of large-cap tech investments and the pace of national growth, high price-to-earnings ratios are accepted—sometimes even praised.
In contrast, investors in Europe are now more cautious about taking risks. Offerings there have relied on cautious narrative, cash flow visibility, and profitability. Although quieter debuts are frequently the outcome, aftermarket performance becomes more steady.
Hype isn’t the main problem. These days, a lot of initial public offerings (IPOs) are not based on traditional criteria. Their business models, which are frequently usage-based financial platforms, token-driven ecosystems, or SaaS hybrids, do not fit within traditional paradigms. Underwriters have little to cling to because of this lack of precedent.
And the consequences of underwriters making mistakes are swift. When lower-than-expected adoption or marketing burn rates that weren’t adequately disclosed in the S-1s are revealed during earnings calls, some equities fall precipitously. Some businesses are so adaptable in their early branding that they collapse when it comes time to deliver.
There has never been more pressure on businesses to appear successful at listing. A high debut price generates currency for upcoming transactions, maintains employee equity morale, and justifies earlier rounds. However, the bar is also raised. A stock that drops 30% in a matter of weeks clouds future capital raises and causes internal worry.
This year’s volatility is also being driven by a new type of investment behavior that one analyst recently dubbed “algorithmic front-running.” Certain funds are using machine-learning models to examine prospectus text, compare it with sentiment patterns, and make bids within minutes. These days, it’s not just about the stats. It has to do with the patterns.
This results in a quick-reacting IPO market that is especially challenging to assess with conventional due diligence. It’s not just the company’s products that tell the story. It’s what the algorithms predict will happen next in the plot.
A few recurring characteristics are often found in listings that survive after an IPO. Not only are they soliciting funds for liquidity, but also for expansion. The excitement around the category doesn’t increase their value. Additionally, they have presented incredibly clear unit economics, including margin per section and customer attrition.
Some of these companies have greatly decreased their risk of investor backlash by using moderate storytelling and clever pricing. Interestingly, if market momentum slows down, businesses with cash-use roadmaps linked to actual milestones typically recover more quickly.
It’s simple to assign blame to media amplification or impulsive investors. But the market’s structure is changing. The influence of retail participation has increased since the epidemic, and funds are now competing more on speed than on understanding. This makes pricing windows smaller and prioritizes visibility over depth.
The data presents an engaging narrative. After their second earnings call, companies whose valuations are too tightly linked to industry talk typically decline. Those that set their prices according to IP moat strength or recurring revenue reasoning were noticeably more robust.
An analyst at a top investment bank described a recent initial public offering (IPO) as “priced for perfection, structured for exit, and marketed like a crypto coin” in a confidential note. I thought about that statement for days—not because it was cynical, but rather because it felt frighteningly accurate.
However, there is cause for optimism. The caliber of inquiries is rising as investors adjust to this new routine. The actual use of revenues, capital allocation plans, and governance are receiving more attention. Price isn’t as often regarded as a stand-in for potential.
In the upcoming months, there will probably be a divide: businesses that embrace operational footing and openness will do better than those that merely ride hype cycles. That discrepancy may be especially useful as the market corrects.
IPO markets are adapting; they are not broken. Additionally, although this year has made valuing difficult, investor scrutiny has become noticeably more intense. Even if their launch was not particularly spectacular, the companies that embrace that criticism have a greater chance of succeeding.
