The post-Memorial Day session was unusually quiet on the pricing tape — only two SPACs crossed the line — but the IPO calendar for the week ahead is anything but. Seven companies seeking a combined $4.69 billion joined the launch slate, led by natural-gas engine maker INNIO Holding at $1.91 billion, according to weekly tallies from Renaissance Capital. It is the busiest single-week launch since the spring window opened in early March, and it pushes the year’s first-half pipeline well past most banker expectations.
The set spans industrial-energy, quantum computing, aerospace, ad-tech, mining, specialty insurance, and natural-gas royalties — a breadth that suggests the IPO window has reopened across, rather than within, sector themes.
The June IPO calendar at a glance
| Issuer (Ticker) | Sector | Deal size | Price range | Market cap | Lead bookrunners |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| INNIO Holding (INIO) | Industrial / Energy | $1,913M | $24–$27 | $19.1B | Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan |
| Quantinuum (QNT) | Quantum / Tech | $1,000M | $45–$50 | $12.2B | JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley |
| Applied Aerospace & Defense (AADX) | Aerospace & Defense | $634M | $18–$21 | $3.3B | Morgan Stanley, Jefferies |
| Liftoff Mobile (LFTO) | Ad-tech / Software | $399M | $20–$22 | $3.9B | Goldman Sachs, Jefferies |
| Sunshine Silver Mining & Refining (SSMR) | Mining | $300M | $13.50–$16.50 | $2.3B | Morgan Stanley, Scotiabank |
| Safepoint Holdings (SFPT) | Specialty insurance | $267M | $15–$17 | $1.2B | Deutsche Bank, Morgan Stanley |
| WhiteHawk Minerals (WHK) | Energy / Royalties | $180M | $25–$27 | $678M | Raymond James, Stifel |
| Combined | 7 deals | $4,693M | — | $42.7B | — |
INNIO is the anchor
At the high end of the slate is INNIO Holding (INIO), the Jenbacher and Waukesha natural-gas engine business carved out of GE in 2018 and majority-owned by Advent International. Marketing 70.85 million shares at $24–$27, INNIO is targeting roughly $1.91 billion in gross proceeds at a mid-point market cap near $19.1 billion. Lead bookrunners Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan have positioned the offering against secular demand for distributed power generation — particularly behind-the-meter capacity for data centers and on-site industrial loads, where natural-gas reciprocating engines are increasingly competing with diesel and gas turbines.
If INNIO prices at the mid-point, the float will represent about 10% of shares outstanding, leaving Advent as a holder of a controlled-company stake post-deal — a structure that has become common in PE-backed listings over the past two years.
Quantinuum lifts the quantum-computing benchmark
The other billion-dollar deal on the slate is Quantinuum (QNT), the trapped-ion quantum-computing developer formed from the 2021 merger of Honeywell Quantum Solutions and Cambridge Quantum. With a $45–$50 range and 21 million shares offered, the company is seeking roughly $1.0 billion at a $12.2 billion mid-point cap. JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley are running the deal.
Quantinuum’s IPO has been telegraphed for months — its early bookbuilding momentum was characterized as strong enough that bankers reportedly considered raising both the price range and the deal size mid-marketing. A successful pricing at the high end would set the largest US-listed quantum-pure-play valuation to date.
Mid-cap deals span four sectors
Applied Aerospace & Defense (AADX), at $634 million, is the third-largest deal — a vertically integrated design-and-manufacturing platform for space and defense customers, riding the same procurement-cycle tailwinds that have lifted listed peers. Liftoff Mobile (LFTO), backed by Blackstone since it combined the former Liftoff and Vungle in 2021, is marketing 19 million shares at $20–$22 for roughly $399 million in proceeds and a $3.87 billion mid-point cap. Goldman Sachs and Jefferies are leading.
Three smaller deals round out the slate: Sunshine Silver Mining & Refining (SSMR) seeking $300 million for an Idaho silver project; specialty coastal-property insurer Safepoint Holdings (SFPT) at $267 million; and natural-gas royalty holder WhiteHawk Minerals (WHK) at $180 million.
Why now: the index is doing the talking
The single clearest signal that the IPO window is genuinely open is in secondary-market pricing. The Renaissance IPO Index, which tracks the largest, most-liquid US-listed companies that have IPO’d in the prior two years, was up 22.5% year-to-date through May 28, 2026, versus an 11.0% total return for the S&P 500 over the same window. That ~11.5-point spread is the kind of new-issue outperformance that historically pulls more issuers off the bench — and that, in turn, gives bankers cover to price tighter.
The prior week was, by contrast, a quiet one for actual pricings. Only two SPACs crossed the line — Disciplined Growth Acquisition ($150 million) and Tribeca Strategic Acquisition ($140 million) — with no traditional IPOs printing. That makes the upcoming week a step-change in volume rather than a continuation of a steady cadence.
The pipeline keeps refilling
Behind the active slate, the on-file backlog continues to deepen. Property-management software platform Entrata filed last week for an estimated $500 million IPO, joining a thinner-than-typical software pipeline. Looming over everything are two filings that have already been publicly disclosed but not yet priced: OpenAI’s confidential S-1, with Citi and JPMorgan in early underwriter discussions, and SpaceX’s filing to list as SPCX. Neither is expected to print this quarter, but their presence on the calendar — alongside a $4.7 billion week — is the clearest statement in two years that US new-issue capacity has materially returned.
One caveat: every deal on next week’s slate is still a marketed range, not a price. Range-busters either direction will move the read on demand more than any of the deal-by-deal narratives. The first prints will set the bar for the rest of June.
Sources
- Renaissance Capital — US IPO Week Ahead (May 29, 2026)
- Renaissance Capital — US IPO Weekly Recap (May 29, 2026)
- Investing.com / Reuters — Blackstone-backed Liftoff targets $3.7B valuation
- Investing.com / Bloomberg — Quantinuum IPO size and price may rise
- Renaissance Capital — Entrata files for $500M IPO
Disclosure: This article was produced with AI assistance and reviewed before publication. It is for informational purposes only and is not investment advice.