Nasdaq has reported the strongest first half in U.S. exchange history, saying in a market update that companies raised $129.3 billion from new listings in the first six months of 2026, led by SpaceX’s $85.7 billion offering, the largest IPO on record.
The figure turns Nasdaq’s announcement into something larger than an exchange milestone. It shows that the U.S. IPO window has reopened after the post-2021 freeze, with investors again willing to fund large growth companies at public-market valuations. Seven of the 10 largest IPOs of the year listed on Nasdaq, according to the company, with AI, aerospace, quantum computing, energy and biotechnology all represented among the largest deals.
SpaceX dominated the first half, raising $85.7 billion and accounting for roughly two thirds of Nasdaq’s stated H1 total. FinanceFeeds had previously covered how SpaceX targeted Nasdaq for its listing, how parallel markets formed before trading began, and why the valuation reshaped the IPO calendar. Nasdaq’s latest update now shows the scale of that effect across the entire exchange.
Key Numbers From Nasdaq’s First Half
| Metric | H1 2026 Figure | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Total capital raised from new listings | $129.3 billion | Largest first-half total in U.S. exchange history, according to Nasdaq |
| SpaceX IPO | $85.7 billion | Largest IPO of all time and the main driver of the record |
| Share of top 10 IPOs listed on Nasdaq | 7 of 10 | Shows Nasdaq’s hold over large growth listings |
| Nasdaq Texas launch | March 2026 | Adds a regional dual-listing venue during a capital formation boom |
The record was not only about one company, although SpaceX was clearly the anchor. Nasdaq also cited Cerebras as the largest semiconductor IPO of all time, Quantinuum as the largest pure-play quantum IPO of all time, and Parabilis Medicines as the largest biotech IPO of all time. Fervo Energy delivered the largest energy IPO of the year, while SpaceX, Arxis and Honeywell Aerospace expanded Nasdaq’s exposure to space and defense listings.
Why The IPO Market Reopened
The first half of 2026 followed several years in which many private companies delayed public listings because of higher interest rates, weaker growth-stock valuations and concern over post-IPO performance. That caution has now eased. Stronger equity markets, AI-led investor demand, a broader recovery in risk appetite and the need for late-stage private companies to offer liquidity to employees and early backers have all helped reopen the market.
The scale of global issuance supports that view. Mergermarket data cited by the Wall Street Journal showed global equity fundraising reached $729.4 billion in the first half of 2026, the second-strongest start to a year on record. The same report said technology fundraising reached $302 billion, helped by SpaceX and other large tech-related transactions.
That comparison is important because the strongest previous IPO cycles, including 2000 and 2021, were followed by sharp market corrections. The current reopening is therefore a sign of confidence, but it also raises the risk that the market is again concentrating too much capital in a small number of high-growth, high-valuation companies.
SpaceX Turned One IPO Into A Market Event
SpaceX’s listing was large enough to distort the entire first-half total. The company’s IPO alone represented about 66% of Nasdaq’s $129.3 billion figure. Reuters reported that SpaceX ended its first trading day with a valuation above $2 trillion, after shares opened above the IPO price and closed around $160.95.
For retail investors, the listing also became a case study in how public markets are changing. FinanceFeeds reported that crypto rails had already priced SpaceX exposure before the Nasdaq debut, while pre-IPO markets showed strong demand before traditional trading began. That created a parallel pricing environment where crypto-native traders, prediction markets and synthetic exposure products were reacting before the official opening cross.
The result was a public listing that looked less like a conventional IPO and more like a market-structure event. It tested exchange capacity, index inclusion mechanics, retail allocation, crypto-linked price discovery and the ability of public markets to absorb a company already valued at levels normally associated with the largest listed firms in the world.
Sector Breakdown: AI, Quantum, Biotech, Energy And Aerospace
| Sector | Representative Nasdaq Listing | Market Signal |
|---|---|---|
| Aerospace and defense | SpaceX, Arxis, Honeywell Aerospace | Public investors are funding space, defense and infrastructure growth |
| Semiconductors and AI | Cerebras | AI infrastructure remains one of the strongest IPO themes |
| Quantum computing | Quantinuum | Investors are willing to fund long-duration frontier technology |
| Biotechnology | Parabilis Medicines | Large biotech IPOs are returning after a difficult funding cycle |
| Energy | Fervo Energy | Energy transition assets are still drawing public capital |
This mix matters because it suggests the reopening is not limited to software. Nasdaq is positioning itself as the listing venue for the broader innovation economy, from chips and quantum computing to space, biotech and energy. That is different from a narrow speculative rebound and gives the IPO cycle more depth.
What Nasdaq Texas Adds
Nasdaq also used the first-half update to highlight Nasdaq Texas, which launched in March 2026 as a dual-listing venue. Rachel Racz was appointed President, and an inaugural Advisory Board was formed to guide its approach to capital formation, governance and market development.
SpaceX dual-listed on Nasdaq Texas at the time of its IPO, making the venue the largest listing venue in Texas by market capitalization, according to Nasdaq. The strategic point is clear: Texas has become a larger center for corporate headquarters, energy, aerospace, technology and financial services activity. Nasdaq is trying to capture that shift before regional capital formation becomes a larger competitive battlefield.
Educational Explainer: Why IPO Capital Raised Is Not Market Cap
An IPO’s capital raised measures how much money is collected by selling shares in the offering. Market capitalization measures the total public value of the company after listing. SpaceX raising $85.7 billion does not mean the company was worth $85.7 billion. It means the offering sold that amount of stock. The company’s market value was much higher because the IPO represented only a portion of the total equity.
This distinction matters when comparing IPOs. A smaller company can sell a large portion of itself and raise a meaningful amount, while a giant company can sell a smaller stake and still produce a record-breaking offering. In SpaceX’s case, both the amount raised and the implied valuation were historically large.
Why This Matters For Brokers, Traders And Fintechs
A strong IPO market affects more than investment banks and exchanges. Brokers benefit from increased retail interest, higher demand for listed equities, options activity and CFD coverage. Trading platforms gain new instruments that can drive user acquisition and engagement. Market makers and liquidity providers gain more symbols with active order flow. Data vendors and index providers also benefit as newly public companies enter benchmarks, ETFs and structured products.
That explains why SpaceX moved quickly from IPO candidate to trading product. FinanceFeeds reported that STARTRADER listed SpaceX CFDs days after the debut, showing how quickly brokers can convert major public listings into tradable products for retail clients. The same pattern could repeat if other large private companies move toward public markets in the second half of 2026.
The Risk: A Healthy IPO Window Can Become An Overheated One
The main question is whether the first half represents a durable reopening or a front-loaded boom driven by a handful of mega-deals. SpaceX’s weight inside Nasdaq’s total means the headline number needs context. Without SpaceX, the first-half total would still be active, but far less historic.
Investors will now watch post-IPO trading performance, lockup expiries, valuation discipline and whether second-half issuers can price deals without relying on the halo effect of AI, aerospace or Elon Musk-linked demand. If new listings trade well, more late-stage companies may accelerate filings. If the largest deals fade after debut, the window could narrow again.
Outlook: The IPO Calendar Has Changed
Nasdaq said the pipeline remains strong across AI, biotech, energy, aerospace and defense. That matters because IPO markets often reopen in stages. First come the highest-quality or most anticipated issuers. Then come companies that waited for proof that public investors were ready. Finally, if conditions remain strong, lower-quality issuers test the market, which is usually when discipline becomes more important.
The first half of 2026 has already delivered the proof of demand. The second half will test whether that demand is selective or indiscriminate. For Nasdaq, the record $129.3 billion first half strengthens its position as the main public-market venue for large innovation companies. For investors, it revives an older question: when public markets reopen this quickly, is the opportunity in buying the new listings, or in watching which ones can survive after the opening-day demand fades?