Global capital markets are increasingly pivoting toward artificial intelligence companies preparing to go public, with Anthropic and OpenAI seen as front-runners for major initial public offerings in 2026. The shift highlights how traditional financial systems still control access to large-scale funding, price discovery, and long-term valuation, even as digital finance expands.
AI listings restore traditional finance’s pricing power
Anthropic’s expected IPO is being viewed as more than a capital-raising event. It will be the firm’s first test in global price discovery, where its worth is set by continuous trading rather than private deals. That process, overseen by established exchanges and intermediaries, reinforces conventional finance’s role as the primary arbiter of corporate value in the new AI era.
In this framework, the central function of traditional finance is less about issuing capital and more about assigning value. Around-the-clock trading by global participants, including pension funds and sovereign wealth funds, establishes reference prices that guide capital allocation across sectors from technology to energy.
High public-market valuations for chipmakers and electric vehicle companies have shown how pricing power in listed markets can channel large pools of money into specific innovation cycles. These price signals determine which technologies scale fastest and which business models gain institutional trust.
Big tech still lines up for public markets
Despite years of debate in technology and digital asset circles over whether traditional listings are still necessary, major growth companies continue to move toward public markets. Databricks and SpaceX are among those pursuing listings not only for liquidity but for integration into global asset allocation systems and regulatory regimes that favor long-term capital.
Joining public markets gives companies access to benchmark indexes, research coverage, and standardized disclosure rules, all of which can support more stable funding and broader ownership.
Digital assets adopt equity-style valuation
A similar evolution is underway in digital assets. Cryptocurrencies that once relied mainly on narrative and momentum are now being judged on more conventional metrics, including active users, protocol revenue, and recurring cash flows. Market participants increasingly evaluate digital projects through lenses similar to those used for equities.
The introduction of spot Bitcoin ETFs has accelerated this convergence. Bitcoin is now analyzed alongside major macro assets such as equities and gold, with valuation drivers that include global liquidity conditions, central bank policy, and overall risk appetite. Its price no longer trades in isolation from broader market dynamics.
Stablecoins like USDT and USDC deepen this alignment by extending dollar-based assets across blockchain networks. Issuers and managers of these products, some already publicly listed, are measured using valuation multiples and reporting standards familiar from traditional corporate analysis. That has helped bridge regulated monetary systems and digital finance.
Cross-market tools point to a unified financial architecture
New platforms now allow users to monitor equities, commodities, and digital currencies in a single interface, signaling demand for seamless portfolio management that spans both worlds. This integration reflects how traders increasingly treat digital assets as part of a broader, multi-asset allocation strategy, rather than as an isolated niche.
As this structure develops, competition among trading venues is shifting. Exchanges are now judged on their ability to connect regulated price discovery in legacy markets with the speed, programmability, and open architecture of digital networks. The platforms that successfully merge these capabilities are likely to shape the next generation of global financial infrastructure.
AI IPOs drain liquidity from Bitcoin ETFs
The coming AI listings are already influencing liquidity conditions across markets. The anticipation around high-profile IPOs from Anthropic, OpenAI, and other AI leaders is drawing capital away from existing positions, including digital assets.
One clear sign is the record outflow from spot Bitcoin ETFs, which saw about $4.4 billion withdrawn over 13 consecutive trading days heading into early June. This sustained exit by large institutions indicates a deliberate rotation of capital in preparation for heavyweight AI stock offerings.
For digital assets, this means trading will take place in a more selective funding environment. Assets that rely primarily on narrative momentum may struggle to maintain attention as speculative capital is reallocated toward public equity opportunities that offer clearer earnings paths and regulatory visibility.
Stablecoins hit record market cap amid rotation
Even as some capital exits Bitcoin ETFs, the base infrastructure of digital finance is strengthening. In April 2026, the total market capitalization of stablecoins surpassed $321 billion, reaching a new all-time high. These dollar-pegged tokens now account for roughly 75% of all digital asset trading volume.
This dominance underlines how stablecoins have become the core liquidity layer for digital markets, binding blockchain-based activity more tightly to the US dollar and, by extension, to global monetary policy. It also suggests that, while speculative risk assets may be under pressure, the transactional rails of digital finance are becoming more entrenched.
Markets converge on fundamentals and durability
In the near term, traders will be watching both individual asset performance and the movement of liquidity between key sectors, especially flows from digital assets into AI-linked public offerings.
One likely outcome of this rotation is a sharper focus on digital projects that can show sustainable revenue, user growth, and defensible business models. Those that resemble traditional technology companies in terms of metrics and governance may be better positioned to retain or attract capital.
Traditional finance contributes regulatory clarity, deep liquidity, and established valuation practices. Digital finance brings transparency, programmable assets, and new ways to transfer value. Together, they are pushing markets toward a hybrid pricing regime, in which AI companies, cryptocurrencies, and stablecoins are all judged by increasingly similar standards of cash flow, risk, and resilience.
Over time, this hybrid model could redefine how value is set across global markets, with public AI firms and institutional-grade digital assets sharing the same capital pool, analytical frameworks, and macro drivers.
Explore how traditional markets and DeFi intersect in valuing AI and digital assets in our TradFi deep-dive.
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