Get the latest tech news

No Alpha Left in Public Markets


Apollo Chief Economist Torsten Slok, writing in a blog post There are fewer public companies to invest in, and firms that decide to do an IPO are getting older and older. In 1999, the median age of IPOs was five years. In 2022, it was eight years, and today, the median age of IPOs has increased t...

Apollo Chief Economist Torsten Slok, writing in a blog post There are fewer public companies to invest in, and firms that decide to do an IPO are getting older and older. The rise in the age of companies going public is not only a result of the Fed raising interest rates in 2022, but also the consequence of more companies wanting to stay private for longer to avoid the burdens of being public. Combined with the domination of passive investing, failure of active managers and high correlation in public markets, and high concentration in a few stocks, the reality is that there is no alpha left in public markets.

Get the Android app

Or read this on Slashdot

Read more on:

Photo of alpha

alpha

Photo of public markets

public markets

Related news:

News photo

FreeBSD 15.0 Alpha 1 Released For Early Testing

News photo

KDE Linux Enters Alpha As Reference Linux Distribution For The KDE Desktop

News photo

Figure’s IPO filing marks Mike Cagney’s return to public markets