Search
Logo
Log In
Subscribe To Premium
Home
Latest
Newsletters
Podcast
Water Cooler
Perspectives
chart-line-up
Get our free daily news briefing for Canadians
Logo

What’s wrong with the IPO market?

Nov 14, 2023

What’s wrong with the IPO market?

Canada’s IPO market is drier than a desert valley at high noon. 

Driving the news: Of the 20 tech companies that went public on the TSX between mid-2020 and late 2021, digital meeting tool company Q4 has become the sixth to officially de-list — with private equity firm Sumeru buying up the company’s shares for half of their issue price.

  • Like seemingly everything these days, interest rates and economic anxiety have tempered the IPO market, killing valuations and investor risk appetite. 

Zoom out: Going public in Canada has become about as attractive as getting a root canal. Only one company, Lithium Royalty, has listed on the TSX this year, with shares falling by 33% since. Unless a surprise IPO happens by December, it’ll be the lowest total since 1993.

  • In the U.S., potential blockbuster IPOs between Instacart, Klaviyo, Birkenstock, and Arm were supposed to revive public listings this year. Instead, they underperformed. 

Why it matters: IPOs can help pump fresh blood into Canada’s main stock index, which has remained mostly stagnant in 2023, and is currently down ~1% from last year. And if no tech companies are listing, it might be some time until we see a tech-fuelled surge in the index.

  • Though blue-chip tech stocks with outsized impacts on markets are very hard to come by, a Shopify surge led to the index’s best day of the year earlier this month.

What’s next: Canadian IPOs could rebound next year, between Blackberry spinning off its IoT biz and growth in the resources sector. Conversely, a recession and panic-inducing geopolitical factors (i.e. a U.S. election, war in the Middle East) could mean new lows.—QH

Print media isn’t dead

Print media isn’t dead

Inside the exciting world of independent Canadian magazines.

Could Canada join the EU?

Could Canada join the EU?

It isn't likely, but it's also not impossible.

Canada’s biking industry is navigating rocky terrain

Canada’s biking industry is navigating rocky terrain

What’s ailing the Canadian biking industry?

Get the newsletter 160,000+ Canadians start their day with.

“Quickly became the only newsletter I open every morning. I like that I know what’s going on, but don’t feel terrible after I finish reading.” -Amy, reader since 2022

Peak Money

Search

PR Pitches

Login

Sign Up