When Circle's shares opened at $69 on the New York Stock Exchange in June, more than double the $31 pricing, it looked like validation. Investors paid up for a When Circle's shares opened at $69 on the New York Stock Exchange in June, more than double the $31 pricing, it looked like validation. Investors paid up for a

A toxic trend that suggests the IPO window is slamming shut for most crypto companies ignored Circle

When Circle's shares opened at $69 on the New York Stock Exchange in June, more than double the $31 pricing, it looked like validation. Investors paid up for a regulated stablecoin issuer with real revenues, treating USDC rails as financial infrastructure rather than speculative crypto exposure.

Six months later, Circle trades at $82.58, up nearly 20% from that opening print. The thesis held.

However, the rest of the 2025 IPO class told a different story. eToro, which debuted at $69.69, now sits at $35.85, down 48.6%. Bullish collapsed from $90 to $43.20, a 52% wipeout. Gemini, the Winklevoss-backed exchange that went public at $37.01, lost 70% of its value, trading at $11.07 by mid-December.

Even Figment, the staking provider that gained 11.2% to $40.04, barely cleared its $36 launch price.
Against Bitcoin's 8.5% year-to-date decline to $85,620, the cohort's performance reads less like a triumph of crypto equities than a live stress test of how much risk investors will tolerate on top of the asset itself.

That dispersion matters because 2025 was supposed to be the crypto equities coming-out party. Circle's billion-dollar listing, HashKey's 400x-oversubscribed Hong Kong debut, and a pipeline stocked with Kraken, Consensys, and others framed the year as proof that crypto infrastructure could command Wall Street multiples.

Instead, the scorecard reveals something more selective: public markets will underwrite crypto businesses, but only when the cash flows are defensible, the regulatory posture is clear, and the multiple doesn't assume perpetual bull-market conditions.

What looked like an open window in June narrowed sharply by December, and the question for 2026 is whether that window stays open at all, or whether it closes to everyone except the handful of names that survived 2025 with their valuations intact.

The strategic split: infrastructure vs. beta

Circle's outperformance against the rest of the cohort isn't an accident of timing.

The company generates revenue from USDC reserves, essentially arbitrage the spread between Treasury yields and the zero interest it pays stablecoin holders.

That model works regardless of whether Bitcoin trades at $100,000 or $50,000, which insulates Circle from the pure directional bet that defines exchanges like Gemini or trading platforms like eToro.

When crypto spot volumes crater, those businesses lose fees immediately. Circle keeps earning.

Figment's modest 11% gain reflects a similar logic. Staking infrastructure depends on proof-of-stake network adoption, not speculative trading activity. As long as Ethereum, Solana, and other PoS chains keep validating blocks, Figment collects its cut.

eToro, Bullish, and Gemini, by contrast, are fee machines tethered directly to retail enthusiasm. When Bitcoin dipped 8.5% in 2025, and altcoin volumes followed, those platforms saw trading activity evaporate.

Investors who bought the IPOs expecting sustained crypto mania got caught holding leveraged downside instead. The 50%-plus losses don't reflect broken businesses, they reflect the market repricing what “crypto equity” actually means when the underlying asset wobbles.

Public investors demanded compensation for that volatility, and the stock prices adjusted accordingly.

The lesson for 2026 is that crypto equities are bifurcating. On one side sit companies with durable, counter-cyclical, or quasi-infrastructure business models that can justify premium valuations even when Bitcoin chops sideways.

On the other side, platforms whose earnings move in lockstep with speculative fervor. The former can tap public markets whenever the IPO window opens. The latter needs Bitcoin at all-time highs to make the underwriting math work.

2025 was a test run, not a victory lap

Circle and Figment proved that real businesses can go public and hold value. Gemini, eToro, and Bullish proved that investors won't blindly chase crypto beta in equity form anymore.

That repricing happened fast. By late November, Bloomberg Law noted that new US IPOs posted slightly negative returns in the fourth quarter, even as the S&P eked out gains, with crypto IPOs “among the biggest casualties” of the quarter's drawdown.

The message was clear: public investors will still buy crypto risk, but only at the right price and with earnings visibility. The “anything with a blockchain” phase ended somewhere between Circle's June debut and Gemini's December collapse.

Consensys joining the queue signals confidence that 2026 remains viable, but also that founders know the opportunity won't last forever. If rates rise, if Bitcoin corrects hard, or if capital rotates back to native token speculation, the equity route closes.

The cohort that went public in 2025 will have gotten out just in time. The stragglers might wait years for another shot.

What the scorecard signals for 2026 risk appetite

The 2025 IPO cohort's underperformance relative to Bitcoin suggests that equity investors are treating these businesses as leveraged, fee-driven proxies on the cycle rather than secular growth stories.

That sets the bar higher for 2026. Companies hoping to go public will need to demonstrate cash generation that survives a flat or down market, not just hockey-stick projections that assume sustained retail euphoria.

But Circle's retention of gains points to durable demand for regulated crypto infrastructure.
Investors still want exposure to stablecoin rails, tokenization platforms, and custody providers, businesses where regulation and earnings are transparent.

That appetite didn't vanish when Bitcoin dipped, it just became more selective.

Nasdaq expects billion-dollar-plus listings to jump in 2026, with U.S. IPO proceeds up roughly 80% in 2025 versus 2024. Falling rates, high valuations, and broad market sentiment support that view.

But the winners' list remains narrow. A tech-capital-markets analysis of 2025 IPO gainers showed that AI and crypto names like CoreWeave and Circle dominated, with very few breakouts outside those themes. The risk budget for 2026 is concentrated rather than broad.

Any new crypto listing will need to fit into a clear structural narrative, such as stablecoin infrastructure, tokenized assets, on-chain AI integration, or institutional custody, to compete for that capital.

A16z's “State of Crypto 2025” frames the year as one of institutional adoption, with Circle's IPO marking the moment stablecoin issuers became mainstream financial institutions.

The report notes that exchange-traded products now hold about $175 billion in crypto assets, up 169% year-over-year, and that public “digital asset treasury” companies control roughly 4% of the combined Bitcoin and Ethereum supply.

Together, ETPs and treasury plays account for around 10% of outstanding BTC and ETH. That's a deepening pipeline between capital markets and tokens, and the IPO cohort represents another node in that infrastructure.

But institutional participation remains shallow. Reuters reported mid-year that less than 5% of spot Bitcoin ETF assets are held by pensions and endowments, with another 10-15% held by hedge funds and wealth managers.

Most flows still come from retail. As genuinely long-horizon institutions enter, they're more likely to start with regulated wrappers, ETFs, listed exchanges, stablecoin issuers, than with direct altcoin bets.

The 2025 IPO scorecard previews the kind of risk those institutions will tolerate on their books: steady, cash-generative businesses with clear compliance frameworks, not speculative trading platforms levered to meme-coin volume.

The real question for 2026

The 2025 cohort's performance doesn't settle the question of whether crypto IPOs are a durable asset class. It clarifies the terms on which public markets will engage. Investors will underwrite crypto businesses, but they're done paying growth-stock multiples for cyclical fee streams.

Circle's resilience shows there's an appetite for infrastructure plays that generate revenue independent of token-price euphoria. Gemini's 70% collapse shows there's no appetite for platforms whose earnings disappear the moment retail loses interest.

That creates a narrow path for 2026. The regulatory environment is clearer and more stable, stablecoins are mainstream, and the general IPO window is open.

But crypto risk is increasingly expressed through public market structures, such as ETFs, corporate treasuries, and now a scrutinized IPO cohort, rather than through token speculation.

The companies that thread that needle next year will be those that convince investors they're building financial plumbing, not riding a wave. The ones that can't will wait for the next cycle, whenever that arrives.

The post A toxic trend that suggests the IPO window is slamming shut for most crypto companies ignored Circle appeared first on CryptoSlate.

Market Opportunity
Moonveil Logo
Moonveil Price(MORE)
$0.002509
$0.002509$0.002509
+2.07%
USD
Moonveil (MORE) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Building a DEXScreener Clone: A Step-by-Step Guide

Building a DEXScreener Clone: A Step-by-Step Guide

DEX Screener is used by crypto traders who need access to on-chain data like trading volumes, liquidity, and token prices. This information allows them to analyze trends, monitor new listings, and make informed investment decisions. In this tutorial, I will build a DEXScreener clone from scratch, covering everything from the initial design to a functional app. We will use Streamlit, a Python framework for building full-stack apps.
Share
Hackernoon2025/09/18 15:05
Which DOGE? Musk's Cryptic Post Explodes Confusion

Which DOGE? Musk's Cryptic Post Explodes Confusion

A viral chart documenting a sharp decline in U.S. federal employment during President Trump's second term has sparked unexpected confusion in cryptocurrency markets
Share
Coinstats2025/12/20 01:13
Google's AP2 protocol has been released. Does encrypted AI still have a chance?

Google's AP2 protocol has been released. Does encrypted AI still have a chance?

Following the MCP and A2A protocols, the AI Agent market has seen another blockbuster arrival: the Agent Payments Protocol (AP2), developed by Google. This will clearly further enhance AI Agents' autonomous multi-tasking capabilities, but the unfortunate reality is that it has little to do with web3AI. Let's take a closer look: What problem does AP2 solve? Simply put, the MCP protocol is like a universal hook, enabling AI agents to connect to various external tools and data sources; A2A is a team collaboration communication protocol that allows multiple AI agents to cooperate with each other to complete complex tasks; AP2 completes the last piece of the puzzle - payment capability. In other words, MCP opens up connectivity, A2A promotes collaboration efficiency, and AP2 achieves value exchange. The arrival of AP2 truly injects "soul" into the autonomous collaboration and task execution of Multi-Agents. Imagine AI Agents connecting Qunar, Meituan, and Didi to complete the booking of flights, hotels, and car rentals, but then getting stuck at the point of "self-payment." What's the point of all that multitasking? So, remember this: AP2 is an extension of MCP+A2A, solving the last mile problem of AI Agent automated execution. What are the technical highlights of AP2? The core innovation of AP2 is the Mandates mechanism, which is divided into real-time authorization mode and delegated authorization mode. Real-time authorization is easy to understand. The AI Agent finds the product and shows it to you. The operation can only be performed after the user signs. Delegated authorization requires the user to set rules in advance, such as only buying the iPhone 17 when the price drops to 5,000. The AI Agent monitors the trigger conditions and executes automatically. The implementation logic is cryptographically signed using Verifiable Credentials (VCs). Users can set complex commission conditions, including price ranges, time limits, and payment method priorities, forming a tamper-proof digital contract. Once signed, the AI Agent executes according to the conditions, with VCs ensuring auditability and security at every step. Of particular note is the "A2A x402" extension, a technical component developed by Google specifically for crypto payments, developed in collaboration with Coinbase and the Ethereum Foundation. This extension enables AI Agents to seamlessly process stablecoins, ETH, and other blockchain assets, supporting native payment scenarios within the Web3 ecosystem. What kind of imagination space can AP2 bring? After analyzing the technical principles, do you think that's it? Yes, in fact, the AP2 is boring when it is disassembled alone. Its real charm lies in connecting and opening up the "MCP+A2A+AP2" technology stack, completely opening up the complete link of AI Agent's autonomous analysis+execution+payment. From now on, AI Agents can open up many application scenarios. For example, AI Agents for stock investment and financial management can help us monitor the market 24/7 and conduct independent transactions. Enterprise procurement AI Agents can automatically replenish and renew without human intervention. AP2's complementary payment capabilities will further expand the penetration of the Agent-to-Agent economy into more scenarios. Google obviously understands that after the technical framework is established, the ecological implementation must be relied upon, so it has brought in more than 60 partners to develop it, almost covering the entire payment and business ecosystem. Interestingly, it also involves major Crypto players such as Ethereum, Coinbase, MetaMask, and Sui. Combined with the current trend of currency and stock integration, the imagination space has been doubled. Is web3 AI really dead? Not entirely. Google's AP2 looks complete, but it only achieves technical compatibility with Crypto payments. It can only be regarded as an extension of the traditional authorization framework and belongs to the category of automated execution. There is a "paradigm" difference between it and the autonomous asset management pursued by pure Crypto native solutions. The Crypto-native solutions under exploration are taking the "decentralized custody + on-chain verification" route, including AI Agent autonomous asset management, AI Agent autonomous transactions (DeFAI), AI Agent digital identity and on-chain reputation system (ERC-8004...), AI Agent on-chain governance DAO framework, AI Agent NPC and digital avatars, and many other interesting and fun directions. Ultimately, once users get used to AI Agent payments in traditional fields, their acceptance of AI Agents autonomously owning digital assets will also increase. And for those scenarios that AP2 cannot reach, such as anonymous transactions, censorship-resistant payments, and decentralized asset management, there will always be a time for crypto-native solutions to show their strength? The two are more likely to be complementary rather than competitive, but to be honest, the key technological advancements behind AI Agents currently all come from web2AI, and web3AI still needs to keep up the good work!
Share
PANews2025/09/18 07:00