BitGo’s Historic Crypto IPO: When Custody Finally Goes Mainstream
The Moment the Industry’s Been Waiting For
BitGo just made a move that’s been sitting on crypto’s wishlist for years. Today, the Palo Alto-based custody giant officially launched its initial public offering, targeting a $1.96 billion valuation and seeking $201 million in what could be 2026’s first major crypto IPO[1][2]. This isn’t just another company going public-it’s a signal that institutional-grade crypto infrastructure is finally getting the Wall Street treatment it deserves.
The company’s pricing 11.8 million shares at $15 to $17 per share, with Goldman Sachs leading the charge and Citigroup joining as co-manager[2][4]. The IPO’s set to price next Wednesday (January 21) and trade Thursday on the NYSE under ticker "BTGO"[5]. Here’s the thing though: this valuation represents something bigger than just numbers on a screen. It’s validation that custody-the unsexy but absolutely critical infrastructure of crypto-is where serious money’s betting.
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Key Takeaways
- Valuation Reality Check: BitGo’s targeting ~$1.96 billion, which means at the midpoint pricing of $16, the market cap lands around $1.85 billion[5]
- Revenue Explosion: The company projects 2025 end-of-year revenue around $16.05 billion, a jaw-dropping jump from $3.08 billion in 2024[2]-but here’s the caveat: that massive leap comes largely from digital asset trading reported on a gross basis, where BitGo acts as principal[2]
- Already Profitable: BitGo posted net income of $164.65 million on revenue of $11.14 billion for the 12 months ending September 30, 2025[5]
- Federal Banking Blessing: The company received conditional approval from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency in December 2025 to operate as BitGo Bank & Trust, a nationally chartered trust bank[2][3]
- Control Stays Put: CEO Mike Belshe maintains roughly 55.5% voting power through a dual-class share structure despite owning only 7.7% economic interest[2]
Why This Matters More Than You Think
Look, custody sounds boring. It’s not the flashy DeFi protocol or the Layer 2 that promises to change everything. But BitGo’s $104 billion in assets under platform management as of September 30, 2025, and its serving of more than 4,900 clients tells you something crucial: institutional capital is already voting with its wallet[5].
The OCC approval in December wasn’t random timing. Five crypto firms got the nod that day-BitGo, Ripple, Circle, Fidelity Digital Assets, and Paxos[3]. That’s not a coincidence. It’s regulators essentially saying, "Okay, these companies are legitimate enough to operate as actual banks." BitGo’s conversion to a nationally chartered trust bank puts it in a club with roughly 60 other OCC-regulated national trust banks[3]. Translation? The industry’s maturing faster than skeptics predicted.
The Revenue Story (And Why You Should Read the Fine Print)
Here’s where things get interesting-and where you need to look beyond the headline. That $16.05 billion revenue projection for 2025 looks insane compared to $3.08 billion in 2024[2]. But here’s the thing: a huge chunk comes from gross transaction volume reported as revenue[2]. When you’re custodying and trading digital assets where you act as principal, the full transaction value hits the books. It’s not quite apples-to-apples with traditional financial services, but it’s not misleading either-it’s just how crypto infrastructure accounting works.
What’s actually impressive? The profitability. $164.65 million in net income[5] on those revenues shows the business model works. This isn’t a company burning cash while hoping for a liquidity event. It’s actually making money.
The Dual-Class Dominance Play
CEO Mike Belshe’s keeping control with a dual-class share structure. He owns 7.7% economically but holds 55.5% voting power[2]. Some investors hate this setup. Others get it-founder control can mean long-term vision instead of quarterly earnings panic. BitGo’s going to operate as a "controlled company" under NYSE rules, which means different governance standards[2]. It’s a trade-off investors will need to weigh.
Timing in a Recovering Market
The crypto IPO market was basically frozen until recently. Kraken confidentially filed in November 2025 after raising $800 million at a $20 billion valuation and is targeting Q1 2026, but hasn’t priced yet[2]. BitGo getting out first with an actual pricing and timeline is a power move. It’s reading the room-crypto sentiment’s shifted, regulatory clarity’s improving (those federal charters prove it), and institutional adoption’s real.
Think about what this signals: if BitGo can raise $201 million at a $1.96 billion valuation, and Kraken’s out there at a $20 billion valuation, you’re seeing major divergence in how the market values different crypto business models. Custody and infrastructure are getting their moment.
- https://economictimes.com/news/international/us/bitgo-stock-to-hit-nyse-bitgo-eyes-1-96-billion-valuation-seeks-201-million-in-us-ipo-as-crypto-listings-rebound/articleshow/126488457.cms
- https://www.coinspeaker.com/bitgo-targets-1-96b-valuation-first-crypto-ipo-2026/
- https://bitcoinmagazine.com/news/crypto-firm-bitgo-eyes-near-2b-valuation
- https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260112528419/en/BitGo-Holdings-Announces-Launch-of-Initial-Public-Offering
- https://www.iposcoop.com/the-ipo-buzz-bitgo-holdings-btgo-proposed-launches-189-million-ipo-for-next-week/








