Jeffrey Bunzel, the head of equity capital markets at Deutsche Bank, added that investors had come to believe that coronavirus would have long-lasting effects, particularly on technology companies.
"There is a reality of how they have become important to the world," he said. Some people will just "not feel comfortable going back to eating out and will continue to order food instead," he added.
Stripping out the roughly US$76b raised through blank-cheque companies, deal activity in the US and Asia jumped more than 70 per cent from the previous year. Listings in Europe, by contrast were lethargic. At US$20.3b, they were down by a tenth from 2019 to reach almost half of 2018 levels.
Proceeds in Asia, at US$73.4b, would have been far higher if payment company Ant Group had not halted its blockbuster US$37b IPO after it ran afoul of Chinese regulators.
Ant's absence handed Beijing-Shanghai High Speed Railway the year's crown: the US$4.4b it raised in its IPO was the largest of the year, topping the US$3.9b raised in Snowflake's listing and US$3.8b collected by Airbnb.
Listings for special purpose acquisition companies, or Spacs, have proliferated. Close to the end of the year, the blank-cheque businesses had accounted for slightly less than US$76b of the cash raised in the US. And others are expected to follow in the new year. In late December, SoftBank filed paperwork to list its own Spac on the Nasdaq.
Bankers and investors are now watching if the Spac phenomenon will migrate beyond the borders of the US, according to James Palmer, head of equity capital markets for Europe at Bank of America.
Some investors have expressed unease over signs of froth in markets, with one-day share price pops in recent IPOs, including for Airbnb prompting comparisons to both 2000 and 2007.
But John Leonard, the global head of equities at Macquarie Asset Management, said that while valuations had been elevated, they were now tied to strong revenue streams. "People aren't trying to value things per click or per eyeball," he added.
Written by: David Carnevali, Eric Platt, Camilla Hodgson and Hudson Lockett
© Financial Times