The crypto sector shattered records with $8.6 billion in deal volume in 2025—a fourfold jump fueled by deregulation and institutional demand—complemented by 11 firms raising $14.6 billion via U.S. IPOs. Amid Bitcoin's volatility from $126,000 highs to $80,000 lows, key deals by Coinbase, Kraken, and Ripple, alongside standout public listings, signaled mainstream maturation.
Wrapping up 2025, the crypto industry logged $8.6 billion in M&A activity per PitchBook, propelled by the 'Trump Effect' shifting U.S. policy toward encouragement. This resilience persisted despite Bitcoin's fluctuations, as analyzed in recent coverage highlighting defiance of the slump and 2026 potential.
Prominent acquisitions included Coinbase's $2.9 billion May purchase of Deribit ($700 million cash plus shares), capturing 90% of crypto options interest for institutional hedging; Kraken's $1.5 billion March buy of NinjaTrader, securing a CFTC license to blend crypto and traditional futures; and Ripple's $1.25 billion April acquisition of Hidden Road, enabling multi-asset prime brokerage with RLUSD stablecoin integration.
Wall Street embraced crypto further, with 11 firms going public or uplisting. Circle debuted on NYSE in June (ticker CRCL), with 34 million shares at $31 surging 167% to $82.84, valuing the USDC issuer over $18 billion. Bullish, Peter Thiel-backed, raised $1.1 billion in November at $37 per share for a $5.4 billion valuation, holding 100,000+ Bitcoin. Figure Technologies listed on Nasdaq in September, raising $693 million at $22 per share for a $4.66 billion valuation post-24% pop.
These milestones position crypto as core financial infrastructure, attracting banks and managers via stablecoins and compliant platforms.