SpaceX’s $75B IPO dominates Q2 2026 as US offerings hit record $104.8B The US IPO market posted its biggest quarter ever in Q2 2026, raising $104.8 billion across 48 offerings, led by SpaceX's $75 billion IPO. The quarter saw no crypto or blockchain listings, with AI and aerospace dominating. SpaceX's S-1 revealed Bitcoin holdings of $1.2-1.45 billion. SpaceX’s $75B IPO dominates Q2 2026 as US offerings hit record $104.8B Renaissance Capital's quarterly review reveals the largest IPO haul ever recorded, while crypto companies remain notably absent from the lineup The US IPO market just posted its biggest quarter in history, and it wasn’t particularly close. Renaissance Capital’s second quarter 2026 review tallied 48 initial public offerings that collectively raised $104.8 billion, a figure so large it eclipses the combined IPO proceeds of the previous two years. The headline act: SpaceX, which completed a $75 billion IPO that single-handedly accounted for more than 70% of the quarter’s total haul. The company debuted with a market capitalization of $1.7 trillion and then climbed 19% on its first day of trading. A quarter defined by mega-deals SpaceX wasn’t the only billion-dollar listing in Q2. Nine other IPOs crossed the $1 billion threshold, with AI chipmaker Cerebras Systems leading that cohort. Forty-eight IPOs sounds like a healthy number, but it’s the average deal size that stands out. Divide $104.8 billion by 48 and you get roughly $2.18 billion per offering. Crypto’s conspicuous absence Renaissance Capital’s review noted zero crypto or blockchain-related listings in the quarter. Not one. The absence doesn’t necessarily mean crypto is dead in the public markets. In 2021, crypto-adjacent companies were rushing to list. In Q2 2026, the money flowed overwhelmingly to AI and aerospace. What this means for crypto investors SpaceX’s S-1 filing reportedly revealed Bitcoin holdings valued between $1.2 billion and $1.45 billion, meaning the most talked-about IPO in recent memory is holding a meaningful amount of BTC on its balance sheet as a treasury asset. Investors should watch for two things in the coming months: whether Q3 brings any crypto-related filings now that the IPO window has clearly reopened, and whether other large-cap companies filing S-1s disclose similar Bitcoin positions. Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy https://cryptobriefing.com/editorial-policy/ .