Historical data indicates that many of the largest initial public offerings in U.S. stock market history have experienced significant declines following their market debut before staging a sustained recovery.
The highly anticipated IPO of SpaceX (SPCX.US) has refocused investor attention on newly listed companies.
The data chart tracks the maximum peak-to-trough drawdowns for these notable major listings after their first trading day. The results show that many high-profile stocks commonly lost between 20% and 60% of their market value before establishing a long-term bottom.
Among the companies with the most severe drawdowns, Amazon.com (AMZN.US) and Robinhood (HOOD.US) lead, with their share prices falling nearly 90% from their post-IPO highs.
They are followed by Uber (UBER.US), Twitter (now renamed X and delisted), and Coinbase (COIN.US).
Other giants on the list include Meta Platforms, Inc. (META.US), Dropbox (DBX.US), Palantir Technologies (PLTR.US), Shopify (SHOP.US), Spotify (SPOT.US), ARM (ARM.US), Tesla Motors (TSLA.US), Zoom (ZM.US), and Airbnb (ABNB.US). All these companies experienced substantial drawdowns before their valuations recovered.
This analysis of historical patterns emerges as investors assess the prospects of the next wave of major IPOs. It suggests that a significant post-listing correction is often a common occurrence, even for companies that later deliver robust long-term returns for investors.
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