The IPO Buzz: Light Traffic for the Fourth of July Holiday Week

The IPO traffic will be light this week – in keeping with tradition for the Fourth of July holiday. The U.S. stock market will be closed on Thursday, July 4, 2024, for the federal holiday also known as Independence Day.  Many market participants – Wall Street pros and investors – take the entire week off or start their long holiday weekend on Wednesday, July 3.

Only two small-cap IPOs have pricing dates on an IPO Calendar that includes three other exceptionally small deals that are on the pricing radar. All five companies on this week’s pricing roster have their roots in China. One small SPAC IPO is also expected to price tonight.

Stay tuned.

(For more information about these companies, please check the IPO Calendar and the individual IPO Profiles found on IPOScoop.com’s website.)

Note: Never trade on proposed symbols. They have been known to change and you might buy something on the OTC Bulletin Board.

To see what time the NASDAQ IPOs are expected to trade, please log in to: NASDAQTrader.com then scroll down to IPO Message.

Disclosure: Nobody on the IPOScoop.com staff has a position in any stocks mentioned above, nor do they trade or invest in IPOs. The IPOScoop.com staff does not issue advice, recommendations or opinions.

Disclaimer: A SCOOP Rating (Wall Street Consensus of Opening-day Premiums) is a general consensus taken, at press time, from Wall Street and investment professionals concerning how well an IPO might perform when it starts trading. The SCOOP Rating does not reflect the opinions of anyone associated with IPOScoop.com. The SCOOP ratings should not be taken as investment advice. The rating merely reflects the opinion of the professionals at the time of publication and is subject to last-minute changes due to market conditions, changes in a specific offering and other factors, such as changes in the proposed offering terms and the shifting of investor interest in the IPO. The information offered is taken from sources we believe to be reliable, but we cannot guarantee the accuracy.