A wave of cryptocurrency exchange initial public offerings in 2025 highlighted the sector's maturation, but recent setbacks reveal heavy dependence on Bitcoin's price movements. Gemini's post-IPO struggles and Kraken's frozen listing underscore vulnerabilities to market cycles. Exchanges must prove revenue stability beyond Bitcoin rallies to sustain investor interest.
The crypto IPO boom of 2025 featured strong debuts from Circle and Bullish. Circle priced its upsized IPO at $31 per share in June 2025, raising $1.05 billion at an $8 billion valuation. Bullish followed in August, pricing at $37 per share, raising over $1.1 billion, and debuting at nearly $13.2 billion, as institutional appetite grew amid regulatory improvements and record revenues for crypto firms. These successes prompted other exchanges to pursue public listings, pitching themselves as mature infrastructure providers with diversified income streams resilient to bear markets. However, Kaiko's analysis reveals that trading volumes, investor interest, and valuations stay closely linked to Bitcoin's price. When Bitcoin rallies, exchange revenues surge from heightened trading activity; when it stalls, volumes drop sharply, compressing earnings expectations. Gemini illustrates this dynamic sharply. The Winklevoss brothers' firm targeted a $3.08 billion valuation in September 2025 amid a rally, but by early 2026 faced a shareholder lawsuit alleging misleading disclosures around workforce cuts, market exits, and a $282.5 million net loss in early 2025. Its stock fell over 75% from the $28 IPO price. Kraken provides another example. After filing confidentially in November 2025 for a Q1 2026 U.S. listing—following $648 million in Q3 revenue and a $20 billion valuation—Reuters reported in March 2026 that the exchange had frozen its plans, awaiting better market conditions. Exchanges differ from stablecoin issuers like Circle, whose revenues from interest and payments hold steadier across cycles. Public investors demand proof of durable earnings through diversification into derivatives, custody, and staking, rather than spot trading tied to Bitcoin volatility.