Kraken reportedly aims to list its shares on a US stock exchange as early as Q1 2026, joining Coinbase, Gemini, and Bullish on public markets. While Bitcoin and major altcoins trade sideways, money continues to flow into crypto equities and mergers, with $8.6 billion in crypto M&A deals recorded in 2025. This shift suggests that while token prices are cooling off, the business side of crypto is heating up again.
(Source – CoinGecko, Kraken)
While the Q1 2026 window is the goal for the Kraken IPO, the real story is in the private books. Kraken is reportedly finalizing a $500 million pre-IPO round this month, targeting a $15 billion valuation. This is a significant jump from its 2022 valuation and suggests Wall Street is already pricing in the ‘regulatory thaw’ following the dismissal of the SEC’s suit
Will a Kraken IPO Really Fire Up Another Bull Run?
Think of an IPO (initial public offering) as a company opening its doors to everyday stock investors for the first time. Kraken, one of the longest-running crypto exchanges, now wants to sell shares on a traditional stock market, similar to how big banks moving into crypto brought the sector a new stamp of seriousness. Kraken is exploring an IPO as early as 2026, following the easing of pressure by US regulators and the SEC’s dropping of a high-profile lawsuit.
This timing matters. In 2025, crypto firms completed roughly $8.6 billion in deals, including Kraken’s $1.5 billion acquisition of futures platform NinjaTrader, as reported by the Financial Times. That kind of deal flow suggests that big players continue to invest heavily in crypto infrastructure, even when token charts appear unexciting.
We also see a wave of other listings. Circle, the company behind the USDC stablecoin, listed on the NYSE in June 2025, and exchanges like Gemini and Bullish also went public. For you as a retail investor, this opens a second route into crypto: you can buy shares in the companies that run the rails, not just the coins themselves.
DISCOVER: 20+ Next Crypto to Explode in 2025
How Could Kraken’s IPO Shape the Next Crypto Cycle?
Every crypto cycle has a story. Earlier cycles focused on Bitcoin halvings and pure speculation. This mid-stage cycle resembles a “Wall Street build‑out,” where exchanges, stablecoin issuers, and mining firms list on stock markets and raise regulated capital. That aligns with the broader debate we cover regarding the crypto market’s path into 2026.
When a large exchange lists, it sends a simple message to traditional investors: crypto is not going away. Public companies are required to publish audited financial statements, adhere to strict disclosure rules, and be accountable to regulators. That transparency gives pension funds, asset managers, and even ETF providers greater confidence to increase their exposure to the sector over time.

