Constructor is called before the component is mounted (as stated here in #constructor doc: https://reactjs.org/docs/react-component.html).
To answer your question, the explanation lies in the lifecycle of a react component and the need to redraw when the state changes. By doing async calls in constructor, you may trigger setState before your component is mounted.
Doing async calls in constructor will mess with the re-render and your component will sometimes not re-render if you call setState in the constructor.
From doc:
You should not call setState() in the constructor(). Instead, if your component needs to use local state, assign the initial state to this.state directly in the constructor:
Avoid introducing any side-effects or subscriptions in the constructor. For those use cases, use componentDidMount() instead.
componentDidMount
is better for a number of different reasons. E.g. the constructor will be run in server side rendering, butcomponentDidMount
will not.