May 24, 2026 ChainGPT

Blockchain.com Quietly Files With SEC, Joins Crypto U.S. IPO Race

Blockchain.com Quietly Files With SEC, Joins Crypto U.S. IPO Race
Blockchain.com has quietly kicked off the race to go public — filing confidentially with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, according to Reuters. The move makes the long-standing crypto exchange the latest industry player to start the IPO process as the sector eyes a return to public markets. What’s happening - The confidential SEC filing begins the regulatory review process for Blockchain.com’s proposed U.S. IPO. That review typically stretches at least two to three months before a company can move forward with a public offering. - Blockchain.com has not yet disclosed how many shares it plans to sell or any price range. Those details — plus its ticker and chosen exchange — will appear in the registration statement when it is publicly filed. Where this fits in crypto’s IPO push - Blockchain.com joins other crypto firms that have announced ambitions to list in the U.S., including Grayscale and Kraken. If it completes a listing, it would be the latest in a small but growing group of crypto platforms to go public alongside names such as Robinhood, Coinbase, Bullish and Gemini. - Several other major crypto companies have stalled IPO plans amid choppy market conditions. ConsenSys and Ledger have both signalled they’ll wait for a more favorable environment; Blockchain.com’s confidential filing could be a way to prepare now while timing the actual offering for a market recovery. Ripple remains on the sidelines - Ripple, by contrast, has explicitly ruled out an imminent IPO. CEO Brad Garlinghouse told attendees at the XRP conference that the company is focused on institutional adoption rather than a near-term public listing. - Garlinghouse also said Ripple’s valuation sits around $50 billion, based on a May share buyback. Retail access to private-company outcomes - While Ripple stays private, prediction market Polymarket has launched markets that let retail traders speculate on private companies’ milestones — including valuation targets, IPO timing and secondary-market activity. Those markets offer one way for retail investors to gain exposure to outcomes typically reserved for private-market participants. Big-picture context - The push by Blockchain.com is part of a broader trend of major private tech and crypto names eyeing public markets — from SpaceX and OpenAI to a growing slate of digital-asset firms. Whether more crypto companies choose to list will likely hinge on market conditions and regulatory clarity in the months ahead. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news