After a record year for crypto listings, the kraken ipo is being pushed back as executives reassess timing in a far tougher equity market. Kraken pauses public After a record year for crypto listings, the kraken ipo is being pushed back as executives reassess timing in a far tougher equity market. Kraken pauses public

Market headwinds force kraken ipo rethink as crypto listings face new reality

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kraken ipo

After a record year for crypto listings, the kraken ipo is being pushed back as executives reassess timing in a far tougher equity market.

Kraken pauses public listing plan amid volatile crypto markets

Crypto exchange Kraken has frozen its long-discussed plan to go public, according to two people with direct knowledge of the process. The company still views an initial public offering as a strategic goal. However, it is unlikely to pursue a listing until equity and digital asset markets stabilize, the sources said, requesting anonymity because the discussions are private.

A company spokesperson confirmed that Payward, Kraken’s parent, is not providing new guidance on timing. “As we announced in November, we filed confidentially with the SEC, and that is all we can really share,” the spokesperson said, referring to the kraken confidential filing of its draft registration.

Details of Kraken’s SEC filing and late 2025 valuation

Payward disclosed that it had confidentially submitted a draft S-1 registration statement to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in connection with a proposed IPO of common stock on Nov. 19. That filing came one day after Kraken announced it had raised $800 million at a $20 billion valuation, including a $200 million investment from Citadel Securities to accelerate the integration of traditional markets with blockchain infrastructure.

Moreover, the capital raise and valuation underscored investor appetite for exchanges that can bridge legacy finance and crypto rails. That said, executives now face a dramatically different backdrop, as weaker trading volumes and risk-off sentiment threaten to compress public-market multiples across the sector.

Crypto market downturn chills appetite for new listings

The decision to pause follows a sharp crypto market downturn since October, when Bitcoin hit a record high before reversing. Declining asset prices and softer trading activity have made management teams more cautious about going public or raising fresh equity. As a result, IPO candidates that rely heavily on trading fees are reassessing the costs and benefits of tapping public markets in 2026.

However, last year told a very different story. A more favorable stance at the SEC helped several large players, including Circle Internet, Bullish and Gemini, complete their listings. According to PitchBook data, at least 11 crypto exchange ipo and related offerings raised a combined $14.6 billion in 2025, a dramatic jump from just $310 million in 2024.

From trading-driven models to financial infrastructure IPOs

In 2026, the landscape for digital asset listings is shifting. Crypto IPOs are increasingly seen as a crucial test of the sector’s durability, with more infrastructure providers evaluating a market debut. Yet, so far, crypto custodian BitGo is the only major digital asset company to go public this year, and its shares have dropped 44%, a move some analysts link partly to messy market conditions rather than firm-specific issues.

Against this backdrop, advisors say investors are scrutinizing financial infrastructure ipo candidates more closely than pure trading platforms. If 2025 was defined by listings tethered to digital asset treasuries, then 2026 is emerging as a year dominated by financial infrastructure, according to a White & Case partner who advises issuers.

Focus on compliance, resilience and recurring revenue

The same partner expects the next wave of issuers to highlight compliance and revenue stability, operational resilience and robust governance in their offering documents. Moreover, these attributes track more closely with traditional public-market expectations and may help reduce valuation volatility. For investors who were burned by speculative token-linked listings, steady fee income and conservative risk management are now front and center.

In that context, executives and bankers say the kraken ipo will likely be judged less on trading volume spikes and more on diversified revenue, regulatory traction and institutional relationships. However, with sentiment still fragile, management appears content to wait for a clearer window before updating investors on any firm timetable.

Securitize and BlackRock-linked tokenization play stay the course

Unlike Kraken, Securitize is pushing ahead with its public listing strategy. The tokenization specialist, which works closely with asset manager BlackRock, said it plans to go public as soon as it receives the SEC’s approval, a milestone it expects to reach in the second quarter. The company has already raised $225 million through a PIPE tied to its SPAC merger at a time when market conditions were stronger.

That said, Securitize’s founder told CoinDesk that interest in real-world asset tokenization remains strong despite current volatility. This resilience, they argued, supports a differentiated path to the public markets that is less reliant on speculative trading cycles and more aligned with long-term infrastructure demand and tokenization firm spacs activity.

Leadership changes add another layer of uncertainty

Adding to the uncertainty, Kraken quietly dismissed its chief financial officer earlier this year, according to two people familiar with the matter. The company has not publicly commented on the leadership change, which emerged in reports updated on March 18 15:23 UTC. However, market participants note that CFO transitions can complicate listing timelines, given their central role in IPO readiness, financial controls and investor communication.

Overall, Kraken’s decision to delay its listing underscores how quickly sentiment has turned since 2025‘s IPO boom. With investors now favoring compliant, infrastructure-focused businesses over trading-driven models, crypto issuers may need to adapt their strategies before the next sustained window for public offerings opens.

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