Market report: Footsie gains and Anthropic joins the AI listing party

* FTSE 100 has lifted in early trade amid some bargain hunting.

* Oil prices pull back from yesterday's gains wth Brent Crude hovering around $94 a barrel.

* Anthropic has filed paperwork for an IPO later this year, joining SpaceX and potentially OpenAI.

* AI enthusiasm has powered Wall Street to fresh highs, and investor sentiment around the new IPO is set to be strong.

* The listings will occur after significant value has already been realised while companies were private, so investors need to be realistic about risk.

Susannah Streeter, Chief Investment Strategist, Wealth Club

"The London market has lifted in early trade as oil prices have dipped back a little, and bargain hunters appear keen to buy the dip of recent days. There is no concrete progress in Middle East negotiations to hang a hat on, but investors appear broadly optimistic that a longer-term resolution will be reached. Even devastating attacks by Russia on Ukraine have not hit sentiment, with investors shrugging off tense geopolitics.

Instead, AI enthusiasm is still the talk of the town, with Anthropic is joining the listing party, filing paperwork for an IPO later this year. The company is clearly keen to capitalise on mega-enthusiasm washing through markets for artificial intelligence investments. It's hot on the heels of SpaceX's filing, and there are expectations that OpenAI will also go public pretty soon. Anthropic may attract particularly strong investor demand because it has built a reputation as one of the more enterprise-focused and safety-conscious AI firms. Its Claude models are considered to be strong performers for business use, especially among companies concerned about reliability, regulation and data security. Backing from major technology groups, including Amazon and Google, gives Anthropic access to enormous computing resources and distribution channels. Combined with growing enterprise adoption of Claude, this could make the company particularly attractive to investors seeking exposure to the AI infrastructure boom.

The listings are set to intensify excitement around AI, but they may also fuel concerns that parts of the market may be entering bubble territory. The huge investor appetite expected for these flotations underlines how strongly AI enthusiasm is creating mega valuations across the US technology sector. However, much of their explosive growth has happened away from public markets. By the time these firms eventually float, a large share of the value creation has often already been captured by early private investors, leaving retail investors at risk of jumping in after much of the lift-off has already occurred.

There are clear echoes of the dot.com era, when soaring optimism around the internet pushed technology stocks to dizzying heights before confidence collapsed as funding conditions tightened. Some of those parallels can't be ignored today as AI excitement has propelled Wall Street to record highs. However, today's AI leaders are generally stronger businesses than many of the speculative companies that dominated the dot.com boom. Firms such as Anthropic, SpaceX and OpenAI are building ecosystems around AI, data infrastructure and compute power which could shape the global economy for decades.

However, high-profile IPOs can still become turning points for market sentiment if valuations appear too detached from fundamentals. Any disappointment could trigger a wider reassessment across tech stocks, which have soared in value. But while some companies may not survive the hype cycle, others could ultimately justify today's lofty valuations, just as Amazon did after surviving the dot.com crash. The rules of the AI race are evolving so quickly that some of tomorrow's winners may still be under the radar. That's why investors need to remain selective, diversified and realistic about risk."

Ends

For further information contact:

Jo Thorne: jo.thorne@wealthclub.co.uk

Wealth Club

Wealth Club was founded by former Hargreaves Lansdown director Alex Davies in 2016. At Hargreaves Lansdown Alex and his team were responsible for launching its SIPP business and growing it to be the UK's largest SIPP provider. Alex was a director of and shareholder in Hargreaves Lansdown which floated on the stock exchange in 2007. This meant that age 38 he was in the fortunate position to be able to retire. With time and a big tax bill on his hands Alex began investing in start-ups using the EIS and VCT schemes. Whilst there were some great opportunities out there, there was very little good quality information to help people decide where to invest and it was difficult to know whom to trust in a very "word of mouth" type of industry. In most cases it was also very difficult to apply for and monitor these investments online.

With this in mind Alex set up Wealth Club. Today Wealth Club is the largest non-advisory investment service exclusively for high net worth and sophisticated investors. It is the biggest broker of Venture Capital Trusts and EIS funds as well as recently launching a discretionary management service and opening up Private Markets funds to individual investors.

Today Wealth Club has 70,000 members who receive regular information on investments from them. Of those 14,000 have become clients and invested more than £1.8 billion through the platform. Its clients typically have £1 to £5 million of wealth, although 22% have more than £5 million and 6% more than £10 million. The business is completely online, although clients can speak to an expert on the phone who will answer their call within a few rings.

Wealth Club has received no external funding and became profitable within a year and a half of operating. Since then, it has increased its profit every year. In its most recent financial year ending 30thJune 2025, it made a pre-tax profit of £3.6 million. 59% of its income is recurring. The company is based in one office in Clifton in Bristol and has 43 employees.



Published in M2 PressWIRE on Tuesday, 02 June 2026
Copyright (C) 2026, M2 Communications Ltd.


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