SaaStr founder Jason Lemkin pegs the next 24 months for a $4 trillion IPO pipeline and $100 billion in SaaS M&A, reversing the “SaaSpocolypse” narrative that gripped 2025, according to saastr.com.
The shift crystallised after generative-agent budgets locked in during Q1 2026. Lemkin’s SaaStr AI Annual opener showed that instead of founders “vibe-coding” internal CRMs on Replit—once predicted to kill Salesforce and HubSpot—enterprises doubled down on incumbent platforms that now embed AI agents to source and close deals automatically. The result: public SaaS multiples rebounded from 4× ARR lows to 8–10×, luring late-stage unicorns toward listings while cash-rich strategics scout add-ons.
The forecast matters because it dwarfs the 2020–2021 IPO wave that totalled $1.3 trillion and the 2022–2024 M&A lull that barely crossed $30 billion. With interest-rate cuts priced in and the Nasdaq SaaS index up 42 % year-to-date, bankers from Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan have already pitched dual-track processes to at least 15 companies above $500 million ARR, according to saastr.com. A surge of liquidity would refill venture coffers, reset founder expectations away from down-round fears, and give corporate buyers fresh currency to consolidate point solutions before the next product cycle.
Lemkin expects the first mega-listing—likely a data-warehouse or security vendor above $200 million ARR—to file a confidential S-1 by October, setting the tone for a Q1 2027 IPO window. Watch for Snowflake, Databricks, and Canva to signal timing via 409A repricings and secondary tender offers; meanwhile, Salesforce, ServiceNow, and Microsoft are said to be lining up $5–10 billion acquisition envelopes for AI-native workflow startups, according to saastr.com.
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