Wall Street loves a good acronym. The newest one is MANGOS.
Here is the twist. Investors can't buy half of it yet.
From FAANG To MANGOS
For ten years, FAANG ruled big tech. It stood for Facebook (now Meta), Amazon, Apple, Netflix, and Google (now Alphabet).
Those five names moved the whole market.
Now a new list is making the rounds. MANGOS swaps in the stars of the AI age.
The group is Meta, Anthropic, Nvidia, Google, OpenAI, and SpaceX. The name started with developers posting on X, then spread fast, according to TechCrunch.
The label is not brand new. A Bank of America analyst first used MANGOS for a group of chip stocks.
This year, traders borrowed the letters for the AI crowd.
The swap says a lot about where the money is going. FAANG was built on social apps, shopping, and streaming.
MANGOS runs on AI and space. Those are the parts of tech investors care about most right now.
FAANG is not dead, and Amazon and Netflix are still giants. They just feel less new than the AI names.
An acronym like this is really just a watchlist with a nickname. The catch is that three of these names are not public.
Anthropic, OpenAI, and SpaceX are all still private.
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The IPO Wave Behind It
That is about to change, and fast. SpaceX begins trading on Friday.
It priced its shares near $135 each, a sale that could raise about $75 billion. That would make it the biggest stock debut on record.
Its roadshow kicked off in early June. A roadshow is the pitch a company makes to big investors before a sale.
Anthropic makes the Claude chatbot, and its sales are running near $47 billion a year. It filed for its own IPO on June 1.
It could even post its first profit this quarter, near $559 million. That is rare for a company this young.
OpenAI has done the least paperwork so far. Even so, most people expect it to file soon.
Put the three together and you get a group worth around $3.6 trillion. The last record year for new US listings was 2021, and these deals could beat it.
The three public names are easy to buy today. Nvidia, Meta, and Alphabet all trade on the Nasdaq.
What To Watch
The acronym is fun. The real test comes once these names trade in the open.
Public markets are tougher than private backers. Quarterly numbers replace big promises.
The AI names will have to show real profit, not just fast growth.
Together the six cover chips, AI models, apps, and rockets. That is a wide bet on the next decade of tech.
For now the lineup is set, and SpaceX is up first on Friday.
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