A new report out today from PitchBook Data Inc. offers a cautiously optimistic outlook for U.S. venture capital-backed initial public offerings in 2026, arguing that although the IPO window has reopened, it remains far from fully functional.
The report details how liquidity conditions improved meaningfully in 2025, as a limited number of high-profile IPOs delivered much-needed exit value and restored some confidence in public markets. However, the IPO recovery has been narrow.
Forty-eight companies went public last year, a level of activity that PitchBook says remains insufficient to support a full venture market recovery, particularly as more than $4.3 trillion remains locked in private unicorns, companies with a valuation of $1 billion or more. After four consecutive years of negative net cash flows to limited partners, pressure to find exits is continuing to mount.
The report highlights that 2025’s IPOs were highly selective and were shaped by macroeconomic uncertainty and political developments that complicated both the timing and pricing of IPOs.
The largest listings in 2025 tended to cluster in sectors aligned with U.S. policy priorities, including artificial intelligence, space technology, cryptocurrency, fintech and defense. Excluding healthcare and life sciences, more than 73% of IPOs occurred in those sectors.
PitchBook argues that this pattern is likely to persist into 2026, with policy alignment and sector focus continuing to influence which companies can successfully reach public markets.
Another notable theme highlighted in the report is value compression: Most unicorns that entered the public markets last year doing so at steep discounts relative to their peak private valuations. The shift reflected a broad reset from pandemic-era pricing to more conservative fundamentals. Though that’s perhaps painful in the short term, PitchBook views the move as a necessary normalization in that it lowers the bar for companies seeking liquidity and helps clear the runway for a longer-term recovery.
For companies that did go public in 2025, post-IPO performance was uneven, with nearly 70% of newly listed companies trading below their first-day close by the end of 2025 and another nearly half were trading below their initial IPO price.
Only four AI companies ended the year above their listing price, with PitchBook saying that this underscores the challenge faced by newer, high-growth companies competing with megacap technology firms for investor capital.
To the surprise of absolutely no one, the most successful companies that went public last year were profitable before going public. Among profitable firms, half traded at least 45% above their IPO price through year-end, reinforcing the importance of sustainable financials rather than pipe dreams of growth alone.
Looking into 2026, PitchBook believes there will be gradual improvement rather than a rapid rebound in IPOs. Presuming favorable conditions, such as easing policy uncertainty and further interest rate cuts, IPO activity could rise to 68 offerings in 2026, a reasonable increase over 2025. If conditions are not particularly favorable, however, PitchBook believes that listings will remain stuck near current levels.
“Ultimately, 2026 has the potential to become a pivotal year for IPOs,” Emily Zhang, senior research analyst, venture capital and Kyle Stanford, director of VC research at PitchBook, conclude in the report.
“The year is expected to demonstrate incremental progress, but whether this pace proves sufficient to help the overall market recover is an open question,” the pair writes. “After an extended slowdown, venture faces mounting pressure to convert paper gains into realizable returns and another year of subdued IPO activity may test the sustainability of the current ecosystem.”
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