Razer CEO Says $1.77 Trillion AI IPO Wave Is Just the Start
Updated
Updated · CNBC · Jun 11
Razer CEO Says $1.77 Trillion AI IPO Wave Is Just the Start
1 articles · Updated · CNBC · Jun 11
Summary
Min-Liang Tan said blockbuster AI listings are only the first wave, speaking a day before SpaceX targets a $1.77 trillion public debut.
OpenAI filed for an IPO on Monday after Anthropic submitted its filing a week earlier, underscoring how quickly major AI groups are moving into public markets.
Anthropic's May 28 Series H valued it at $965 billion, ahead of OpenAI's $852 billion March valuation, highlighting the scale of investor appetite behind Tan's view.
Razer delisted from Hong Kong in 2022 in a deal worth up to HK$10.79 billion, and Tan said the company has since put more than $600 million into AI products and infrastructure.
At Singapore's SuperAI convention, Tan said Razer is "all-in on AI," arguing more second- and third-generation companies will follow the current mega-listings.
As AI giants chase public markets, is Razer’s private strategy a brilliant move or a missed opportunity to scale?
With soaring valuations and dot-com bubble warnings, is the AI market heading for a spectacular crash?
Inside the $1.77 Trillion AI IPO Boom: SpaceX, OpenAI, and the New Era of Tech Valuations
Overview
In 2026, the IPO market is experiencing a remarkable surge, especially in the artificial intelligence sector. This momentum marks the highest year-to-date capital raised since 2021, signaling a renewed influx of investment into advanced technologies. The robust environment is paving the way for the largest AI-driven IPO wave in history, with company valuations soaring into the trillions. SpaceX is leading this movement by launching its public debut, setting the stage for a new era where AI and technology companies attract unprecedented attention and capital, reshaping the global financial and innovation landscape.