Is the unicorn bubble about to burst?

2019 has been touted as the Year of Start-up IPOs, with big-name start-ups making spectacular offerings like we have not seen before.

Recently all eyes were on Uber’s IPO which debuted at US$45 with a valuation of US$82.4 billion and then, days later, China’s Luckin Coffee listed on the Nasdaq at US$17 with a valuation of US$3.9 billion.

Interestingly, whilst both companies are currently loss-making, the stock market responses were different at IPO. Uber lost some 7% at the first trade while Luckin Coffee shot up 47% at opening. Uber is a high-tech platform company that has disrupted personal transportation while Luckin Coffee is more a regular brick-and-mortar business with a potential to challenge Starbucks.

While there are probably many market and product issues in each of the recent IPOs, the question is whether there has been too much hype on high-tech start-ups.

For a start-up which has only perceived worth, an IPO is an objective market test for its true valuation.

For this year alone, start-up mega-IPOs range from platform giants like Pinterest to plant-based meat alternative producer Beyond Meat.

Pinterest, offered in April, shot up a formidable 28 per cent on the first day of trade on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), while Beyond Meat rose a whopping 163 per cent when it debuted on the Nasdaq exchange – the biggest IPO since the 2008 global financial crisis.

Decacorns and hectacorns

Beyond Meat belongs to a special breed of private start-ups called unicorns that are valued, before IPO, at more than US$1 billion. Its valuation is said to surpass US$4 billion.

Pinterest meanwhile is an even rarer breed of decacorns valued at more than US$10 billion. It went IPO with a valuation of nearly US$13 billion – not bad for a company that is essentially selling digital scrapbooks.

On a global basis, there were 345 unicorns as of May with a total cumulative valuation of US$1.2 trillion, according to tech market intelligence firm CB Insights. These are concentrated mostly in two countries – US (171 unicorns) and China (89 unicorns). Out of these, 18 have reached decacorn status.

In Asia outside of China, there are three decacorns – Grab (Singapore), Paytm (India) and Go-Jek (Indonesia).

There is even a hectocorn with a valuation surpassing US$100 billion – China’s Ant Financial valued at US$150 billion. The company is reportedly preparing for IPO as China’s Nasdaq-style equity board in Shanghai prepares to be launched.

The motivation for start-ups to go IPO is strong. Beyond better branding, there is broader and deeper access to new capital. The equity base can also be more diversified beyond private investors.

For a start-up which has only perceived worth, an IPO is an objective market test for its true valuation.

This is particularly crucial for start-ups burning through cash intensely without a sign of profits on the horizon. The public trading will validate its business model and potential, although it also runs the risk of going sideways if the market rejects the start-up’s value proposition.

According to the inaugural Unicorn IPO Report released this March by Harvard Law School, the numbers of unicorns that listed on NYSE and Nasdaq over the last three years have been on the uptick: five in 2016, 13 in 2017 and 20 in 2018.

Exit strategy

Going IPO is a valid exit strategy for many founders and investors, especially to cash out. It may be a natural stage in the life cycle of a start-up.

Notably, over 100 tech unicorns are expected to list in 2019, according to Swiss bank UBS.

The baffling puzzle is that these high-profile start-up IPOs are taking place against a broader backdrop of declining IPOs. Accounting firm EY reported a 41 per cent decrease in global IPO deals and 74 per cent decrease in their proceeds for the first quarter of 2019 compared to those last year.

In fact, for 2018, the number of IPOs dropped 21 per cent year-on-year while proceeds actually went up by 6 per cent due to unicorns getting listed.

So what exactly is happening with all these species of “corns” listing – unicorns, decacorns and even hectocorns? Might they be offloading dud companies to the public markets, benefiting the incumbent investors at the expense of new investors, many of whom may be small-time retail stock buyers?

Looking at the equity markets in perspective, stock prices have languished for almost one-and-a-half years before the turn of 2019. These have picked up in the past few months. In fact, we are seeing all-time highs both on the broad-based S&P 500 index and the tech-focused Nasdaq Composite index.

However, general IPOs have not moved in tandem with the stock market particularly in the since the start of this year. This is strange as IPOs usually take strong cues from the market’s overall share indexes.

It looks like the high-valuation start-ups may be selling out before they get filtered out. And there has never been a better time to ride the crest than now when stock markets are up.

On the one hand, these developments combined may seem like we are approaching a repeat of the dotcom bubble of the late 1990s when the Nasdaq Composite rose more than five-fold from 1995 to 2000 and then fell heavily in two years to almost where it was.

Herd instinct

But unlike the dotcom episode, the current start-up IPO frenzy is seeing valuations reaching astronomical heights even before companies reach the stock markets. And with astonishing herd instinct, stock buyers are simply climbing on the bandwagon.

Are memories that short? It was only last year that the cryptocurrency bubble burst. Early investors, including founders, cashed out. The losers were left holding on for dear life.

It remains to be seen when the mega-IPO music will stop. The Greater Fool Theory predicts however that there is always someone else who will buy at a higher price.

What might get this house of cards come crashing down is an economic calamity like a recession and the game then has to end. The last one carrying the stock will be the most severely punished.

Recently we have seen “inverted yield curves” where long-term Treasury yields fell below short-term yields. This phenomenon is usually a harbinger for a coming recession although it is only a necessary but not sufficient condition.

There are mixed views whether a recession is imminent even if the most recent US job growth and employment data are still favourable. The US Federal Reserve has been raising rates since late 2015 to counter growth and inflation. But it has halted raising interest rates given global uncertainties.

We may be on the cusp of a financial crisis if the string of big-time valuation-hyped IPOs cannot sustain themselves. While this may not be on a scale as vast as the dotcom crash, what is worrying is the potential contagion effect. And if many investors incurred debts for their holdings, they run the risk of not being able to service their borrowings.

This is similar to what happened during the Global Financial Crisis when sub-prime borrowers massively defaulted on their debts.

Start-ups have to make money. Venture capitalists are not philanthropists.

High-valuation IPOs are exciting, but they are like popsicle bubble blowers. The popsicles are colourful and fun but the bubbles cannot stay forever big. And if they grow beyond a sustainable rate, they may burst at the slightest prick.

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