This year's IPO resurgence has been nothing short of spectacular—21 fresh billionaires minted from debut listings alone. The first-day pops, the champagne celebrations, the media frenzy. It's intoxicating stuff.



But here's where it gets interesting: many of these companies that captured everyone's attention at launch? Their performance afterward paints a completely different picture. The initial euphoria rarely translates into sustained gains. You get the splash, the headlines, the FOMO rush. Then reality sets in.

It's a classic pattern in any heated market cycle. Everyone piles in on the hot story, valuations get stretched, and those who rode the wave early cash out while retail arrives late to the party. The spectacular debuts mask what often becomes a grinding slog.

For anyone tracking market psychology and wealth creation patterns, this disconnect between IPO launch hype and actual long-term performance is worth paying attention to. It reveals something fundamental about how markets price opportunity versus how they price sustainability.
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SigmaBrainvip
· 01-01 13:27
I've seen through this IPO game long ago. Those stocks that hit the daily limit on the first day, they end up crashing terribly afterward. Retail investors are always the last to buy in.
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gaslight_gasfeezvip
· 01-01 03:56
The IPO day was indeed exciting, but the ones who truly make money are never the people who buy on the first day. Retail investors are always the last to catch the bag... how many times has this story repeated itself? The coins that surge on the first day, then start to slowly die, are not surprising at all. After media hype, they start dumping, I see through it. Actually, the real alpha only begins after the first day, but retail investors simply can't see it. That's why I only pay attention after the project team has cashed out. Don't ask me how I know. The IPO craze = the leek-cutting craze, the pattern is similar to degen gambling.
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PumpingCroissantvip
· 2025-12-29 14:19
The sharp rise on the first day of IPO is a signal of a rug pull, early institutions that bought the dip are fleeing, retail investors are left holding the bag... This script is replayed every year.
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staking_grampsvip
· 2025-12-29 14:16
The first day of IPOs is indeed exciting, but most of the rest are garbage... I've seen through it long ago. Retail investors are always the last to take the fall. 21 new billionaires sound wild, but how many can really hold on? This is a common problem in the Web3 market—once the hype is over, it's gone. Early entrants get the meat, later ones just get the broth... an eternal truth.
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MetaverseLandlordvip
· 2025-12-29 14:12
This is a typical "cutting leeks" script. The huge surge on the first day is orchestrated by institutions to lure buyers, and retail investors start chasing the high...
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ContractTestervip
· 2025-12-29 14:09
It's the same old trick again, IPO hits the daily limit on the first day, retail investors rush in to be the bagholders... I've seen through it all long ago.
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