US IPOs and share sales hit record $251B at midyear, fueled by SpaceX’s historic listing

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Traditional equity markets just posted a number that makes most crypto rallies look quaint. US IPOs and share sales reached a record $251B through the first half of 2026, according to Bloomberg-compiled data, a figure that excludes SPACs and other investment vehicles.

The single biggest driver of that total: SpaceX’s IPO, which raised $86.2B on its own and claimed the title of largest initial public offering in history. That one listing accounted for more than a third of all midyear proceeds.

The numbers in context

To appreciate how extraordinary that $251B figure is, consider that Goldman Sachs had previously projected full-year US IPO proceeds for 2026 at roughly $160B. The market blew past that forecast before July even arrived.

SpaceX’s $86.2B raise is the kind of number that warps the entire dataset. For perspective, the previous largest US IPO, Saudi Aramco’s 2019 listing on the Tadawul, raised about $25.6B. SpaceX didn’t just break that record. It obliterated it by more than three times over.

Even stripping out SpaceX, the remaining $165B or so in equity issuance still represents a remarkably strong half-year.

What this means for crypto investors

The $251B record contains exactly zero dollars from cryptocurrency or digital asset offerings. Not a single crypto-native company appears to have contributed meaningfully to this milestone.

Investors watching this space should pay attention to whether the second half of 2026 sustains this pace. Goldman’s now-surpassed $160B projection for the full year means the market is running at roughly 157% of what the bank expected.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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