The IPO Window Shut?

 | Mar 28, 2014 05:41AM ET

After yesterday’s disastrous IPO from King Digital Entertainment PLC (KING.K) (down over 15% after the first day of trading), thoughts of another IPO bubble are creeping into the minds of analysts, and investors.  The fear is that the markets are approaching the same levels as the dot com boom, and the recent performance by KING might be the needle that popped the proverbial bubble. 

Over the past three years we have seen IPO’s increasing year over year; in 2013, there were 178 companies filed, raising $41.3 billion, in 2012, there were 102, raising $35.1 billion, and in 2011 there were 97 total IPO’s, raising $28.7 billion.  In the final three quarters of 2013, there were 50 or more IPO’s each quarter, which has not been seen since 2000. 

For 2014, there have been just over 50 companies, so far, that have gone public in 2014; with the most coming from the Health Care Industry (almost half), and the Technology being the second most. 

Performance

The chart (chart 1) below compares the S&P 500 with the two major IPO ETF’s; Renaissance IPO ETF, and First Trust US IPO Index Fund.   As you can see, both ETF’s have kept pace with the S&P 500 Index over the past 4 months (First Trust has been mirroring the S&P for more than a year), but in the past month there has been a significant divergence from the S&P 500 (chart 2)