Finding it difficult to avoid the IPO mania gripping Wall Street? Well, things are about to get worse.
Anthropic and SpaceX already both filed to go public, and now OpenAI has set the wheels in motion for its own stock offering in the coming months.
But investors got a very different message late last week from Bank of America (which is a Marketplace underwriter): There are “too many red flags” pointing to a market peak, according to the report, so it's time to “take profits.”
Stock market analysts don’t really speak in plain English. So when they recommend investors take profits, “they’re really telling people to sell, but they’re trying to do it in sort of a market-etiquette way,” said James Weston, a finance professor at Rice University Business School.
Bank of America analysts offered a couple reasons why now might be time to sell in the report. (The bank declined an interview request from Marketplace.)
For one, there are concerning signs in the “real” economy, Weston said.
“When we talk about valuations of companies, we usually measure it based on the price of the company to their earnings, and right now that's at a very high point,” said Derek Horstmeyer, a professor of finance at George Mason University.
Some tech company shares are really expensive, given how much revenue they actually generate. That could mean investors are being overly speculative, or that the market is near its peak.
The problem with analysts calling on investors to “take profits” is it's really hard to get right, said Ben Carlson, director of institutional asset management at Ritholz Wealth Management.
“There have been people who've been trying to call the top on this for 10 years now,” he said. |