The IPO Moment Has Arrived for AI — And the Timing Is Not Accidental

Anthropic filed confidentially with the SEC. SpaceX amended its S-1. Ondo Finance announced the imminent launch of its perpetuals platform. Pavel Durov confirmed the TON token would be rebranded to Gram. These four developments arrived within 48 hours of each other, and that clustering is not coincidence — it is coordination, driven by a convergence of favourable market conditions, regulatory opportunity, and investor pressure demanding a liquidity event.
The immediate question is not whether these companies will list. They almost certainly will. The more interesting question is why they are moving now, at the same time, and what that timing tells us about the state of both the AI sector and the broader capital markets.
The confidential filing is now the default
All four companies used the SEC's confidential submission process, which allows issuers to file draft registration statements without public disclosure. The mechanism was designed for foreign companies unfamiliar with US disclosure norms. It has become the standard move for large domestic tech firms that want to test the waters quietly — gauge investor appetite, adjust their narrative, correct projections — before the full weight of public scrutiny arrives.
The process works because confidential filings shield operational details — revenue, user metrics, cost structure — from competitors and from the press. What they do not shield is the fact of the filing itself. Regulators know. Institutional investors know. The press knows, or will within days. The confidentiality is strategic, not total. It buys time for positioning without creating the kind of speculative frenzy that can price a deal wrong.
Why AI companies, specifically, are moving now
The timing for AI sector IPOs is not arbitrary. Two forces are converging. First, the private market has been generous: Anthropic raised at a reported valuation exceeding $60 billion. SpaceX reportedly reached a $350 billion valuation in secondary transactions. These valuations are inferences — they exist because late-stage private investors were willing to pay a price for access, not because public markets have tested what the assets are actually worth. Second, the infrastructure is ready. NVIDIA's dominance of the compute layer has stabilised supply chains enough that the speculative period of massive capex uncertainty is easing. Customer adoption curves are beginning to look like enterprise software curves, not moonshot curves.
That combination — inflated private valuations, improving fundamentals — is the classic pre-IPO window. The companies that moved fastest and raised the most in private markets now face a structural tension: their shareholders expect a return on capital, and the instrument most likely to deliver that return is a public listing. The window is open. The companies are walking through it.
The public markets test
There is a reasonable argument that going public is, in the current moment, a discipline the AI sector needs. Private market capital is patient but not accountable — it does not demand quarterly proof of concept. Public markets do. They require revenue recognised under GAAP, operating margins disclosed, guidance given and met. For companies that have built their valuations on inference rather than income, the transition is not trivial. Anthropic will face questions about its revenue multiples that its private investors never had to ask. SpaceX will face questions about its margins and government contract concentration that secondary-market buyers have mostly avoided.
The companies that list successfully will be those that have converted inference into income, or that have a credible enough narrative to sustain premium multiples against modest near-term earnings. The companies that list and find no buyers will have revealed something important about the gap between private optimism and public discipline. That is the test. The confidential filings suggest these companies believe they will pass it.
The regulatory window
The timing also reflects regulatory context. The Trump administration has rolled back the Biden-era AI governance frameworks and moved to loosen SEC disclosure requirements for emerging-growth companies. That creates a specific window — companies filing now are doing so with the expectation that the regulatory environment will be more accommodating than it might be in 12 or 18 months, when the current administration's posture on tech oversight may shift.
That is not speculation — it is standard capital-markets logic. Companies do not wait until disclosure rules become more demanding; they move when the environment is permissive. The wave of filings is, in part, a bet on the durability of the current posture. If that posture changes, the window closes.
The result is a cluster of IPO filings that, taken together, represent a threshold moment for the AI sector and, more broadly, for the financial architecture supporting it. Confidential filings are a signal that the industry believes the market is ready and the regulatory environment is favourable. Whether that belief survives contact with actual public market discipline remains to be seen. The filings mark the beginning of an answer, not the answer itself.
This article was edited in line with Monexus's standard AI sector coverage guidelines.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/Cointelegraph/14562
- https://t.me/Cointelegraph/14560
- https://t.me/Cointelegraph/14564
- https://t.me/Cointelegraph/14559