Kraken has put its long planned public listing on hold as weak crypto prices and softer investor demand continue to weigh on the digital asset sector.
Key Takeaways
- Kraken has paused its IPO plans as the wider crypto market downturn continues.
- The exchange was valued at more than $20 billion after major fundraising rounds ahead of its expected listing.
- BitGo’s weak post listing performance and falling crypto linked stocks have added to caution across the sector.
- Even so, firms such as Securitize still plan to go public, showing that some companies remain confident in the long term outlook.
What Happened?
Kraken has delayed its planned initial public offering after a sharp slowdown in the crypto market made public listings less attractive. Reports said the company had confidentially filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in late 2025, but it is now waiting for conditions to improve before moving ahead.
A Kraken spokesperson told CoinDesk: “As we announced in November, we filed confidentially with the SEC, and that is all we can really share.”
SCOOP: @krakenfx freezes its IPO plans due to difficult market conditions.
— CoinDesk (@CoinDesk) March 18, 2026
The exchange had filed confidentially with the @SECGov in November after raising $800M at a $20B valuation. pic.twitter.com/mrC826QMTI
Market Slump Pushes Kraken to Wait
Kraken’s IPO pause comes at a time when crypto prices, trading volumes, and investor confidence have all weakened. The decline began after the market turned lower in October 2025, and it has continued into 2026, making investors more cautious about new listings.
The company had been seen as one of the biggest crypto firms preparing to enter public markets. According to the combined reports, Kraken’s parent company, Payward, filed a draft registration with the SEC and raised a fresh $800 million, pushing its valuation above $20 billion. One report also noted that an earlier round in September 2025 raised $500 million, valuing the business at $15 billion before the later jump in valuation.
That fundraising included backing from major institutional names. Citadel Securities was reported to have committed $200 million, while other investors mentioned across the reports included Jane Street, DRW Venture Capital, HSG, Oppenheimer Alternative Investment Management, Tribe Capital, and the family office of Kraken co-founder Arjun Sethi.
Crypto IPO Boom Loses Steam
The delay marks a shift from the strong momentum seen last year. In 2025, crypto IPO activity surged, helped by a more favorable policy environment in the United States. Across the sector, there were 11 crypto IPOs worldwide, raising $14.6 billion, compared with just $310 million in 2024.
Still, the market mood changed after the October selloff. Several newly listed crypto firms lost ground, showing how quickly sentiment can turn when digital asset prices fall. BitGo, the only major crypto company to go public so far in 2026, has been held up as a warning sign. One report said its stock fell 44 percent, while another said shares dropped about 20 percent after listing amid market volatility. Either way, the message for would be issuers is clear: this is not an easy market.
Morningstar analyst Michael Miller summed up the pressure facing the industry, saying:
Kraken Keeps Building While IPO Waits
Even with the IPO on hold, Kraken is still expanding. The company has made acquisitions including NinjaTrader, Backed Finance, and Magna as it works to strengthen its platform and broaden its digital asset services. It has also rolled out tokenized equity perpetual futures for clients outside the United States through its xStocks offering.
The reports also pointed to internal changes, including the dismissal of CFO Stephanie Lemmerman earlier this year. At the same time, other crypto firms are still moving ahead. Securitize has said it expects to go public once it receives SEC approval. Carlos Domingo, founder and chief executive of Securitize, told CoinDesk:
CoinLaw’s Takeaway
In my experience, companies usually pause public market plans when they believe the timing could hurt valuation, investor demand, or both. I found Kraken’s decision practical rather than alarming. The company does not appear to be backing away from growth. Instead, it looks like it is choosing patience in a market that still feels unstable. For readers, the bigger story is not just Kraken. It is the clear sign that crypto IPO momentum has cooled, and only the strongest firms with real scale may be able to move ahead confidently in 2026.