| ▲ | JumpCrisscross 5 hours ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
> what is driving this is the need for insiders, employees, early investors to be able to sell their stock at scale before the music stops How would you differentiate insiders needing to sell versus insiders needing to dump before a crash? I remember when Uber and Airbnb and WeWork went public in quick succession. There were similar claims. WeWork never made it public. And Uber and Airbnb's IPO investors made of fantastically. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | siren2026 5 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
> How would you differentiate insiders needing to sell versus insiders needing to dump before a crash? To answer this, just ask yourself how many of the insiders would have bought the stock at current IPO's price? Most insiders would probably never touch those stocks at this price. I know a couple people at OpenAI and Anthropic that are very clearly selling everything they can as soon as they can. This is all a carefully orchestrated PR game that is relying on retail to be the ultimate fool. I guess to some level every IPO is like that (A PR game to hype the company). But never before had we 3 mega IPOs happening at almost the exact same time with so much money to unload on retails with dubious ways to force funds to gobble them. Most IPOs end up negative after the first few quarters (at least compared to the SP500). When we are talking about a 20B$ company it matters less than 5T$ being suddenly fully unloaded on the public. > And Uber and Airbnb's IPO investors made of fantastically. Did they? https://www.alphaspread.com/comparison/nasdaq/abnb/vs/indx/g... The only way they might have is by getting the shares at the actual IPO price, and even then it's around the same as the SP500 return since then. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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