2025年前三季度美股市场股权融资规模总计1481亿美元
Zhi Tong Cai Jing·2025-10-13 23:32

Core Insights - The U.S. equity underwriting market showed strong performance in the first three quarters of 2025, with total equity financing (including IPOs and refinancing) amounting to $148.1 billion, an increase of $20.9 billion or 16.40% year-over-year [1][3][38]. Equity Financing Overview - Total equity financing in the U.S. for the first three quarters of 2025 reached $148.1 billion, with IPOs contributing $46.9 billion (up 50.07% year-over-year) and refinancing totaling $101.2 billion (up 5.42% year-over-year) [3][7][38]. - The non-bank financial sector led the fundraising with $49.9 billion, followed by software services at $18.4 billion and pharmaceuticals at $13.8 billion [10][45]. IPO Market Analysis - A total of 310 companies went public in the first three quarters of 2025, an increase of 128 companies compared to the previous year [15]. - The Nasdaq remained the leading exchange for IPOs, with 246 companies raising $29.4 billion, accounting for 62.73% of the total IPO market [17]. - The largest IPO was by Venture Global, raising $1.75 billion, followed by CoreWeave at $1.5 billion and SailPoint Parent at $1.38 billion [29]. SPAC and Chinese Companies - There were 85 SPAC IPOs in the first three quarters of 2025, a significant increase of 56 from the previous year, raising $16.2 billion, up 190.93% year-over-year [32]. - 59 Chinese companies went public in the U.S., raising $1 billion, a decrease of 58.35% year-over-year [34]. Refinancing Trends - The refinancing market saw 665 events, a slight increase of 16 from the previous year, with total proceeds of $101.2 billion [2][38]. - The non-bank financial sector led refinancing with $24.2 billion, followed by software services at $12.5 billion and pharmaceuticals at $12.1 billion [45]. Underwriting Rankings - Goldman Sachs topped the IPO underwriting rankings with $4.758 billion from 29 deals, followed closely by Cantor Fitzgerald and JPMorgan [54][56]. - In refinancing, JPMorgan led with $15.458 billion from 58 deals, followed by Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley [58][59].