Logo

Jooish News

LatestFollowingTrendingGroupsDiscover
Sign InSign Up
LatestFollowingTrendingDiscoverSign In
JBizNews

A Wave of Giant AI Stock Sales Is About to Test Wall Street’s Nerve

Jun 9, 2026·3 min read

Wall Street is heading into a test unlike anything it has faced before.

Three of the world’s most valuable private companies are preparing to sell shares to the public at nearly the same time, creating a historic stress test for investor appetite toward artificial intelligence, advanced technology, and trillion-dollar valuations.

The lineup is remarkable.

SpaceX is preparing to debut Friday at a valuation of approximately $1.77 trillion. OpenAI, creator of ChatGPT, confirmed Monday that it has confidentially filed for a public offering. Rival AI company Anthropic reportedly filed its own paperwork just days earlier.

Together, the companies represent several trillion dollars of private-market value preparing to transition into public markets.

The timing could hardly be more challenging.

Only days ago, the technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite suffered its sharpest decline since early 2025 as investors dumped semiconductor and AI-related shares amid concerns that valuations had become stretched.

The selloff was swift.

The Nasdaq fell more than 4%, while hundreds of billions of dollars in market value disappeared from AI-linked stocks.

Then came Monday’s rebound.

Chip stocks recovered sharply, helping the Nasdaq finish higher and reminding investors that enthusiasm surrounding artificial intelligence remains powerful despite growing concerns about valuations.

That volatility is exactly what makes the upcoming offerings so important.

When a company goes public, investors must find new capital to purchase the shares being sold. With SpaceX alone seeking roughly $75 billion, followed by OpenAI and Anthropic, Wall Street is being asked to absorb an extraordinary amount of new stock in a relatively short period.

If demand remains strong, all three offerings could succeed.

If sentiment weakens, later offerings may face pressure to reduce valuations or raise less capital than expected.

The order matters.

SpaceX is first.

Its debut will provide the market’s first real test of investor appetite for the next generation of AI-era mega-cap companies.

The companies themselves are also in very different financial positions.

SpaceX generated significant revenue but still lost billions of dollars last year.

OpenAI remains one of the fastest-growing companies in history, but it continues spending enormous sums on computing infrastructure and AI development.

Anthropic faces similar questions regarding growth, profitability, and long-term economics.

Investors must decide how much they are willing to pay today for profits that may not arrive until years into the future.

That calculation becomes even more complicated as economic uncertainty grows.

A separate survey released Monday by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York found that Americans are increasingly pessimistic about their personal finances, suggesting consumers may become more cautious in the months ahead.

For investors, the coming wave of offerings represents something larger than individual companies.

The public markets are about to answer a fundamental question:

After years of private funding rounds, soaring valuations, and excitement surrounding artificial intelligence, how much are investors actually willing to pay?

Friday’s SpaceX debut will provide the first clue.

The larger answer will unfold over the months ahead as Wall Street decides which companies deserve their lofty valuations—and which may have benefited from arriving at exactly the right moment.

JBizNews Desk

© JBizNews.com All Rights Reserved. Reproduction or distribution without written permission is prohibited.

View original on JBizNews