Đây là thời điểm mà 'tư nhân' trở thành 'đại chúng'. Cho phép ta có cái nhìn thực tế đầu tiên vào bên trong các công ty như OpenAI, SpaceX và làn sóng ASX mới.

Phát hành cổ phiếu lần đầu ra công chúng (IPO) là khi một công ty tư nhân chào bán cổ phiếu của mình cho công chúng lần đầu tiên. Trước IPO, cổ phiếu thường chỉ do nhà sáng lập, nhân viên đầu tiên và nhà đầu tư tư nhân nắm giữ, nhưng việc trở thành công ty đại chúng mở những cổ phiếu đó ra thị trường rộng lớn hơn.
Đối với trader, IPO có thể là cơ hội đầu tiên để tiếp cận trực tiếp cổ phiếu của một công ty. IPO có thể tạo ra một môi trường đặc biệt với biến động cao và mức độ quan tâm lớn, nhưng cũng đi kèm rủi ro cao hơn vì lịch sử giá còn hạn chế và tâm lý thị trường có thể thay đổi nhanh chóng.
| Công ty | Định giá ước tính | Sàn giao dịch | Trạng thái |
|---|---|---|---|
Anthropic Artificial intelligence | ~US$350 billion | Nasdaq | Rumoured |
Databricks AI and data | ~US$134 billion | Nasdaq | Expected |
Firmus Technologies AI infrastructure | ~A$6 billion | ASX | Expected |
Greencross Pet care & veterinary | ~A$4 billion plus | ASX | Rumoured |
OpenAI Artificial intelligence | ~US$850 billion | Nasdaq | Expected |
Rokt E-commerce adtech | ~US$7.9 billion | Nasdaq and ASX CDI | Expected |
SpaceX Aerospace and AI | ~US$1.5 trillion | Nasdaq | Expected |
Stripe Fintech | ~US$140 billion | NYSE/Nasdaq | Rumoured |
Quy trình niêm yết diễn ra như thế nào
Đến ngày niêm yết, nhà đầu tư tổ chức thường đã định giá công ty. Hiểu được quy trình sáu giai đoạn giúp trader nhận biết điều gì có thể đã tác động vào giá trước khi cổ phiếu mở cửa ra thị trường rộng hơn.
Công ty chọn một đơn vị bảo lãnh phát hành để đánh giá tài chính, cơ cấu doanh nghiệp và vị thế thị trường.
Đơn vị bảo lãnh phát hành tiến hành thẩm định và nộp tài liệu công bố thông tin cho cơ quan quản lý liên quan.
Ban lãnh đạo trình bày với nhà đầu tư tổ chức và nhà phân tích. Đây là giai đoạn nhu cầu được hình thành và kỳ vọng giá được thiết lập, trước khi trader cá nhân nhìn thấy cổ phiếu.
Dựa trên phản hồi từ roadshow, đơn vị bảo lãnh phát hành đặt giá cổ phiếu cuối cùng và quyết định số lượng cổ phiếu sẽ phát hành.
Cổ phiếu bắt đầu giao dịch trên sàn đã chọn. Với hầu hết trader, đây là cơ hội đầu tiên để giao dịch cổ phiếu đó.
Khi đã trở thành đại chúng, công ty phải công bố kết quả tài chính thường xuyên và đáp ứng các tiêu chuẩn quản trị của sàn giao dịch.
Giao dịch IPO bằng CFD
Ngày niêm yết IPO thường được định hình bởi những biến động tâm lý lớn và khi lịch sử giá còn mỏng. Sự kết hợp đó có thể khiến việc mở và giữ lệnh trở nên khó quản lý hơn. CFD cho phép trader quan sát cả hai chiều biến động, điều chỉnh size vị thế chính xác và hành động nhanh khi có biến chuyển xảy ra.
Giao dịch theo đợt tăng giá ban đầu hoặc điều chỉnh sau khi cơn sốt qua đi. CFD cho phép bạn đặt lệnh theo cả hai hướng kể từ ngày niêm yết.
Biến động IPO thường tập trung trong những ngày và tuần đầu tiên. CFD phù hợp với các khung thời gian ngắn hơn, dưới sự tác động bởi những sự kiện như vậy.
Lệnh dừng lỗ và lệnh giới hạn có thể giúp xác định rủi ro trước khi vào lệnh, điều này rất quan trọng khi quá trình khai phá giá vẫn đang diễn ra.
Tiếp cận CFD cổ phiếu trên các thị trường Mỹ và Úc, bao gồm những cái tên như Rokt và Firmus Technologies, chỉ từ một tài khoản.

Tiếp cận CFD cổ phiếu Mỹ và Úc với khớp lệnh nhanh, giá cạnh tranh và công cụ quản lý rủi ro tích hợp.
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April’s US earnings season is arriving in a market that is asking harder questions. It is no longer enough for companies to tell a good story. Traders want to see whether the physical side of the next cycle is turning into real revenue, steadier margins and clearer guidance.
That is why Tesla, NextEra Energy and Exxon Mobil matter this month. Each sits close to a theme the market is trying to price right now: autonomy, electricity demand and oil supply risk. They are very different businesses, but together they offer a useful read on where attention may be shifting when the market wants something more tangible.
In 2026, those signals are colliding with a high-friction backdrop:
The broader theme here is simple. AI still matters. Growth still matters. But this earnings season may also test the companies supplying the power, infrastructure and fuel behind that story.
For beginner to intermediate traders, this matters because these stocks can move for very different reasons. Tesla can trade on margins and product narrative. NextEra can trade on power demand and capital spending plans. Exxon can move with crude, refining margins and buyback confidence. Looking at them together gives traders a clearer way to think about how the market is pricing the real economy side of the 2026 story.


So here is the thing: April’s US earnings season is arriving in a market that still feels anything but normal. As GO Markets explains in The global US earnings playbook: The essential guide for traders, this reporting period is landing after a real shift in what markets care about. It is no longer just about chasing growth at any cost. It is about what the numbers are saying beneath the surface.
And in 2026, those signals are colliding with a high-friction backdrop:
Yes, AI is still the market’s main story but it's still the flashy engine getting most of the attention. But underneath that, there is a quieter move towards companies that look built to hold up better when conditions get harder.
When rates are uncertain and energy markets are under pressure, names like JPMorgan Chase and the major defence contractors start to carry more weight. They are not replacing the AI narrative, rather, they are becoming part of the way traders read risk appetite, earnings durability and, ultimately, where the market is looking for something more solid to hold on to.


If you have been watching markets over the past year, you will have noticed that the "growth at any cost" era has effectively hit a wall. The April 2026 earnings cycle arrives at a moment when the market's focus has undergone a structural reorientation. It is not just about profit and loss statements anymore. It is about the signals sitting behind them.
With interest rate uncertainty lingering and geopolitical shocks pushing oil above US$100, the playbook has shifted from AI hype toward institutional resilience and the industrialisation of compute. For traders in Australia, Asia and Latin America, these results may act as a mood ring for global risk appetite and the emerging security supercycle.

A BMO result hits before the US cash market opens, so price discovery happens in pre-market trading where liquidity is thinner and moves can be exaggerated. An AMC result hits after close, meaning the reaction is compressed into a short pre-market window the following morning. Understanding which window your company reports in is as important as understanding what it reports.
It's worth asking: Is the obvious trade already priced for perfection?
2026 is shaping up as a year of proof. Companies that spent heavily on AI over the past two years are now being asked to show the return. The market is no longer rewarding the announcement of AI investment. It is rewarding the evidence of AI-driven revenue outcomes.
A better framing question for each result is this: are you reacting to a headline, or are you assessing the company's role in the physical AI supply chain or as a potential volatility hedge? Those are very different analytical tasks, and they tend to produce very different positioning decisions.


Here is the situation as April begins. A war is affecting one of the world's most important oil chokepoints. Brent crude is trading above US$100. And the Federal Reserve (Fed), which spent much of 2025 engineering a soft landing, is now facing an inflation threat driven less by wages, services or the domestic economy, and more by energy. It is watching an oil shock.
The Fed funds rate sits at 3.50% to 3.75%. The next Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting is on 28 and 29 April and the key question for markets is not whether the Fed will cut, it is whether the Fed can cut, or whether the energy shock may have shut that door for much of 2026.
A heavy run of major data releases lands in April. The March consumer price index (CPI), non-farm payrolls (NFP) and the advance estimate of Q1 gross domestic product (GDP) are the three that matter most. But the FOMC statement on 29 April may be the release that sets the tone for the rest of the year.
Think about what the US economy looked like coming into this year: AI-driven capital expenditure (capex) was a major part of the growth narrative, corporate investment intentions looked firm and the One, Big, Beautiful Bill Act was already in the mix. On paper, the growth story looked solid.
Then the Strait of Hormuz situation changed the calculus. Not because the US is a net energy importer, it is not, and that structural insulation matters. But what is good for US energy producers can still squeeze margins elsewhere and weigh on global demand. The 30 April advance Q1 gross domestic product (GDP) estimate is now likely to be read through two lenses: how strong was the economy before the shock, and what it may signal about the quarters ahead.
February's jobs report was, depending on how you read it, either a blip or a warning sign. Non-farm payrolls (NFP) fell by 92,000, unemployment edged up to 4.4% and the official line was that weather played a role. That may be true but here is what also happened. The labour market suddenly looked a little less convincing as the main argument for keeping rates elevated.
The 3 April employment report for March is now genuinely consequential. A bounce back to positive payroll growth would probably steady nerves and a second consecutive soft print, particularly against a backdrop of higher energy prices, would start to build a very uncomfortable narrative for the Fed. It would be looking at slower jobs growth and an inflation threat at the same time. That is not a comfortable place to be.
Here is the uncomfortable truth about where inflation sits right now. Core personal consumption expenditures (PCE), the Fed's preferred gauge, was already running at 3.1% year on year in January, before any oil shock had fed through. The Fed had not fully solved its inflation problem, rather, it had slowed it down. That is a different thing.
And now, on top of a not-quite-solved inflation problem, oil prices have moved sharply higher. Energy prices can feed into the consumer price index (CPI) relatively quickly, through petrol, transport and logistics costs that can eventually show up in the price of nearly everything. The 10 April CPI print for March is probably the most important single data release of the month, it is the one that may tell us whether the energy shock is already showing up in the numbers the Fed watches.
April is also the start of US earnings season, and this quarter's results carry an unusual amount of weight. Investors have been pouring capital into AI infrastructure on the basis that returns are coming. The question is when. With geopolitical volatility driving a rotation away from growth-oriented technology and towards energy and defence, JPMorgan Chase's 14 April earnings will be read as much for what management says about the macro environment as for the numbers themselves.
Then there is the FOMC meeting on 28 and 29 April. After the early-April run of data, including NFP, CPI and producer price index (PPI), the Fed will have more than enough information to update its language. Whether it signals that rate cuts could remain on hold through 2026, or whether it leaves the door slightly ajar, may be the most consequential communication of the quarter.
Geopolitical volatility has already pushed investors to reassess growth-heavy positioning. The estimated US$650 billion AI infrastructure buildout is also coming under heavier scrutiny on return on investment. If earnings season disappoints on that front, and if the FOMC signals a prolonged hold, the combination could test risk appetite heading into May.

Asia dominates the global semiconductor supply. Five companies, spanning Taiwan, South Korea, and Japan, sit at the critical juncture of the AI buildout, controlling everything from fabrication to the equipment that makes chips possible.
TSMC is the world's largest contract chip manufacturer, producing advanced semiconductors for Apple, Nvidia, AMD, and Qualcomm. As a pure-play foundry, it leads in 5-nanometer (5nm) and 3- nanometer (3nm) chip production, with smaller nodes in development.
The company posted $90 billion in revenue for 2024 with a 59% gross margin and 36% return on equity.
Shares delivered a total return of 55% in 2025, with analysts forecasting a further ~30% revenue increase in 2026, underpinned by its $100 billion US expansion programme.
The key risk for the company is its geopolitical exposure, with Taiwan Strait tensions remaining the sector's most-watched tail risk.
Samsung is one of the few companies globally that both designs and fabricates chips at scale. It competes across DRAM, NAND flash, and logic chip segments, and remains a core supplier to global tech giants.
Samsung's wide scope is a strength, but also a complexity. Its memory division faces margin pressure from inventory cycles, while its foundry business continues to lag TSMC in leading-edge yields.
The AI-driven memory boom may provide a tailwind, though execution in HBM production has been slower than local rival SK Hynix.

Tokyo-based Advantest makes testing equipment used to verify chips meet performance and quality standards.
It supplies to Samsung, Intel, Nvidia, Qualcomm, and Texas Instruments, allowing it to benefit from chip industry growth broadly, regardless of which foundry wins market share.
Advantest shares doubled in 2025 (+102%), and it raised its sales forecast by 21.8% and earnings forecast by 70.6% for the year ending March 2026.

Tokyo Electron is among the world's largest suppliers of semiconductor production equipment, specialising in deposition, etching, and cleaning tools.
Every major chipmaker, including TSMC, Samsung, and SK Hynix, depends on TEL's systems to scale production.
As chipmakers invest billions to expand capacity, TEL's order book grows. The risk lies in potential US export restrictions on advanced equipment sales to China, which remains one of the primary revenue segments for the company.
SK Hynix is the world's second-largest memory chip maker and has emerged as arguably the clearest AI-era beneficiary in the memory space.
It is Nvidia's primary supplier of High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) chips, the specialised memory used in AI accelerators like the H100 and B200.
HBM demand has driven a dramatic re-rating of SK Hynix's revenue profile and market standing. With AI infrastructure spending showing little sign of slowing heading into 2026, the company's HBM franchise could remain a key differentiator.
However, capacity constraints and the risk of Samsung and Micron closing the HBM gap are the primary concerns to watch.
TSMC, SK Hynix, Samsung, Advantest, and Tokyo Electron collectively control the chokepoints of the AI buildout.
The expected increase in AI infrastructure may support demand, but investors should weigh the risks carefully.
Geopolitical exposure, US export restrictions, and the pace of HBM competition could all move the needle.


So, here’s the thing...
If you have been following the tech story for the last decade, you have been trained to look at a very specific, very small patch of real estate in Northern California. But as we sit here in early 2026, the "connect-the-dots" moment for investors is this: the AI trade has stopped being about shiny software demos in Palo Alto and has started being about the physical industrialisation of compute.
Want to know more? Read our 2026 AI playbook
We have entered the "Year of Proof". The world’s largest companies, the hyperscalers, are projected to spend a staggering US$650 billion on capital expenditures this year. But here’s the part most people miss: that money is not staying in Silicon Valley. It’s flowing to the "picks and shovels" players in Idaho, Washington, Colorado and even overseas.
If you want to understand where the actual return on investment (ROI) may be landing this earnings season, you have to look outside the 650 area code. The shift from AI hype to AI industrialisation is changing the map.
Micron is the "memory backbone" of the current cycle. While everyone was watching the chip designers, many overlooked the fact that AI chips are far less useful without high-bandwidth memory (HBM). Micron is currently viewed by some analysts as a strong buy because its capacity is reportedly sold out through the end of 2026. Analysts are also eyeing a 457% jump in earnings per share (EPS) as the memory cycle reaches what some describe as a robust peak.
Microsoft is the enterprise backbone of this transition. It has moved beyond simple chatbots and is now building what analysts call "Intelligence Factories". While the stock has faced pressure recently over capacity constraints, underlying demand for Azure AI is reportedly still running ahead of capacity. The broader bull case is that Microsoft is moving into "Agentic AI", systems that do not just talk to users but may also execute multi-step business workflows.
Which Asian companies are betting big on artificial intelligence?
Amazon is playing a long-term game of vertical integration. To reduce its reliance on expensive third-party hardware, it’s building its own AI chips in-house. Amazon Web Services (AWS) remains the primary driver of profitability, and the company is using its retail data to train specialised models that many Silicon Valley start-ups may struggle to replicate.
If Micron provides the memory and Microsoft the platform, Palantir provides the "operating system" for the modern AI factory. The company has posted strong momentum, with US commercial sales recently growing 93% year over year. It’s often framed as a bridge between raw data and corporate profitability, which remains a key focus for investors in 2026.
You cannot just "plug in" AI. Businesses often need to redesign processes around it, and that’s where Accenture comes in.
The company is viewed as an implementation bridge, with one analyst arguing that "GenAI needs Accenture" to move from pilot programs to production though the cautionary angle is that the AI story has not fully excited investors here yet because consulting revenue can take longer to show up than chip sales.
The chart maps the three time horizons likely to shape the next phase of the AI industrialisation trade.
In the near term, markets are still reacting to chipmaker earnings, guidance, and any signs of capacity strain. Over the next month, attention shifts to the real-world inputs behind AI growth, especially power, financing, and infrastructure. By the 60-day window, the key question is whether AI spending is broadening into a wider market re-rating or running ahead of near-term returns.
Across all three periods, the focus is the same: proof. Investors are looking for signs that AI capital expenditure is translating into real demand for energy, land, and industrial capacity. That is why updates from companies tied to power and data centre buildout matter more than ever.
The emotional trap many traders fall into right now is recency bias. You have seen NVIDIA and the "Magnificent 7" win for so long that it feels like they are the only way to play this. But the "obvious" trade is often the one that has already been priced in. Before acting, ask yourself: "Am I buying this stock because I understand its role in the physical AI supply chain, or because I’m afraid of missing the next leg of a rally that started two years ago?"
Các tham chiếu đến công ty, ứng viên IPO, định giá, sàn giao dịch, lĩnh vực và thị trường chỉ mang mục đích minh họa, dựa trên thông tin công khai tại thời điểm xuất bản và có thể thay đổi mà không cần thông báo. Một kế hoạch niêm yết có thể bị trì hoãn, điều chỉnh hoặc hủy bỏ, và việc đề cập chúng trên đây không ám chỉ rằng công ty sẽ quyết định niêm yết chúng, hoặc bất kỳ cổ phiếu hay CFD nào dều sẽ có sẵn để giao dịch thông qua GO Markets.