Ledger’s $4B New York IPO Play: Why Crypto’s Quietest Giant Is Suddenly Making Noise

Ledger’s $4B New York IPO Play: Why Crypto’s Quietest Giant Is Suddenly Making Noise

Key Takeaways:

  • Ledger is contemplating a $4 billion+ New York-based IPO which has the potential to triple its last known valuation figure.
  • The announcement also underscores investors’ growing appetite for cryptocurrency-related security and custodial plays rather than pure crypto-related trades and speculations.
  • With increasing hacks, regulations, and institutional developments in cryptocurrency infrastructure, Ledger is at the forefront of it all.

Ledger, a very well-known name in the world of crypto self-custody solutions, is quietly building towards a large public listing within the US. While not as sexy as the cryptocurrency exchanges or the token issuers themselves, this potential IPO is a sign of a much deeper movement: security is quickly becoming crypto’s most valuable feature.

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Ledger Targets a New York IPO Above $4 Billion

Ledger, a French developer of hardware crypto wallets, is considering an IPO in New York, potentially valuing the business at more than $4 billion, according to persons close to the situation, as quoted by the FT. The cryptocurrency hardware developer is in talks with investment banks Goldman Sachs, Jefferies, and Barclays.

A completed listing will be a big jump from the 1.5 billion dollars valuation that Ledger received in 2023 during its funding round, where the funding was led by notable backers such as True Global Ventures and 10T Holdings. This means the organization’s valuation almost tripled its worth within two years, a big leap for a market recovering from total volatility.

This IPO has a high chance of happening by this year itself; however, there are certain factors that need to be kept in mind according to sources. Yet again, there are certain hints within this announcement; for instance, Ledger’s own CEO, Pascal Gauthier, has previously stated how specifically the United States, or cities like New York, are now major focal points for large-scale crypto financings, more so with America’s interests resurging again.

Read More: $10B YZi Labs Backs BitGo IPO as $82B Custody Giant Debuts on NYSE

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Institutional Capital and the Custody Trade

Another important factor contributing to Ledger’s IPO intentions is that the nature and type of cryptocurrency traders are evolving. Institutional players and many others are increasingly investing in cryptocurrency. However, these categories are bound to follow certain rules and regulations and thus make secure custody a virtue.

While regulations are being tightened in the bigger jurisdictions, the rules pertaining to custody are being clearly spelled out. While this has been cumbersome for certain crypto-related businesses, it is a trend that benefits Ledger.

One frequently hears from industry analysts that, unlike exchanges and DeFi platforms, custodial platforms have different risks. Trading platforms are heavily dependent upon market conditions, while keeping a digital asset in a custodial solution will still require this regardless of asset price direction. Thus, if regulations become more stringent, custodial solutions will still be in demand rather than experiencing a reduction.

Ledger reportedly safeguards more than $100B worth of digital assets. This puts it among just a handful of systemically critical private businesses within cryptocurrency security. This further explains its attractiveness to public market investors who want to gain access to its infrastructure without directly touching Bitcoin prices or other digital tokens

IPO Momentum Returns to Crypto Infrastructure

“The news from Ledger follows closely on the heels of BitGo’s IPO on the New York Stock Exchange, where the crypto custody firm began trading for more than $2 billion. Investors saw BitGo’s IPO as an important test to gauge investors’ renewed interest in crypto as an asset class despite past disappointments from numerous crypto IPOs that failed to meet expectations and have ultimately been flat performers on the market.”

More broadly, we’re also seeing several crypto-native players queueing up to list into US public markets. Unlike last year’s crop of exchange and consumer platforms, this batch is heavily skewed towards infrastructure and compliance players.

This trend reflects what we’ve learned from past cycles. For one, public investors have become more selective. They now value predictable revenue, enterprise clients, and being aligned with regulations. Within this framework, Ledger’s business model aligns much more closely with the story than do those of those over-the-counter trading platforms.

Potential IPO of Ledger’s a development that seems symbolic of the shift that is occurring. No longer do crypto companies try to sell investors on the growth trajectory akin to token prices. Hardware wallets might not be the glitziest piece of kit, but they sit at the very base of self-sovereignty in finance. As more money goes into crypto and bad actors remain drawn to it too.

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