Finance and economics | Buttonwood

Why the stockmarket is disappearing

Large companies such as ByteDance, OpenAI and Stripe are staying private

Illustration of a man with a bank for a head waving a handkerchief through a hole reminiscent of the Looney Tunes closing scene
Illustration: Satoshi Kambayashi

The law of supply and demand is one of the first things that students of economics learn. When the price of something goes up, producers bring more to market. What, then, is going on in global stockmarkets?

Global share prices have never been higher, having risen by 14% over the past year. At the same time, the supply of stocks is shrinking. As analysts at JPMorgan Chase, a bank, note, the pace of company listings is slower this year than last, and last year was already a slow one. This means that equity issuance net of stock buy-backs so far this year is already negative, at minus $120bn—the lowest such figure since at least 1999. Companies including ByteDance, OpenAI, Stripe and SpaceX have valuations in the tens or even hundreds of billions of dollars, and remain private.

Explore more

This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline "Was it all a dream?"

Reasons to be cheerful about Generation Z

From the April 20th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Finance and economics

America is in the midst of an extraordinary startup boom

How the country revived its go-getting spirit

Could America and its allies club together to weaken the dollar?

China would not be happy


Banks, at least, are making money from a turbulent world

It is once again a good time to work on a trading desk