The IPO Dilemma for Crypto Companies: Regulation vs. Financial Freedom?
By: crypto economy|2025/05/10 16:15:08
0
Share
TL;DRThe crypto industry is split between the credibility an IPO can bring and the autonomy at the core of its decentralized identity.Going public demands costly compliance frameworks, regular audits, and detailed financial reporting—but those efforts strengthen institutional investor confidence.ICOs, DAOs, and community funding preserve agility and an innovative culture, sidestepping the burdens of the public markets.For more than a decade, crypto ventures have relied mainly on venture capital and private investments. It wasn’t until 2021 that trailblazers like Coinbase and Robinhood entered the stock market. Now, other ecosystem players are seriously considering an initial public offering (IPO), posing a fundamental question: how much regulatory responsibility is worth shouldering to gain credibility and unlock mass capital?Advantages of Listing on the Stock MarketBecoming a publicly traded company means meeting stringent transparency and accountability standards. Quarterly financial statements, regulatory oversight, and external audits require significant investment in compliance, governance, and risk-management structures. These measures not only validate a company’s financial health for both institutional and retail investors but also provide a formal endorsement—crucial in the aftermath of reputational crises or financial irregularities.For stablecoin issuers—whose strength depends on fully audited reserves—a listing on a respected exchange boosts their credibility against competitors and lowers the barrier to entry for banks and traditional funds. Listing also diversifies the shareholder base, dilutes the influence of large risk-capital investors, and enables access to more stable funding through equity sales.Operational and Strategic Challenges of an IPOStill, choosing to list brings significant fixed costs. Maintaining internal risk-reporting systems, anti-money-laundering protocols, and regulated custody solutions demands continuous technological and legal updates. Those requirements can divert talent and budget away from research and development of new blockchain features.Beyond administrative overhead, public companies face relentless pressure to meet quarterly growth and profitability targets. This focus on short-term results can clash with the long-term vision of decentralized projects, which prioritize disruptive innovation over immediate financial metrics. Catering to analysts and shareholders may push firms toward a more conservative approach, jeopardizing the experimental culture that drives blockchain’s evolution.Alternative Models: ICOs, DAOs, and Community FundingRather than pursue an IPO, many firms choose to stay outside public markets, relying instead on token sales, community fundraising rounds, and decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs). These models provide operational flexibility and reduce dependence on public financial disclosures. They uphold the original crypto ethos—resistance to state intermediaries and large financial gatekeepers—by freeing teams from traditional shareholder accountability and allowing product iteration without market-driven restrictions.Case Studies: Bithumb, Circle, and TetherSouth Korea’s Bithumb exchange is planning a KOSDAQ IPO in the first half of 2025, driven more by the need to restore its reputation after a fraud scandal than by a thirst for fresh capital. Public scrutiny and regulatory compliance are intended to reassure wary users.Circle, the issuer of the USDC stablecoin, plans to revive its failed attempt to list on the New York Stock Exchange. The company aims to strengthen perceptions of solvency and attract institutional investors who demand fully backed reserves.In contrast, Tether’s leadership has flatly rejected the IPO path. Their position: staying off the public markets allows them to focus on maintaining robust reserves and direct community engagement, free from quarterly reporting pressures and profit expectations.Convergence or Divergence of ModelsChoosing to list or remain private draws a clear line between two visions of finance’s future: one that embraces regulation, oversight, and mass-market capital; the other that champions decentralization, autonomy, and perpetual innovation. In the years ahead, both models are likely to coexist. Some companies will scale through IPOs in traditional markets, while others will build out decentralized structures and pursue alternative funding.Ultimately, the industry’s maturity hinges on whether firms can blend blockchain’s technological agility and disruptive spirit with the transparency and governance required of a public company. Striking that balance will determine the sector’s resilience and its ability to sustainably reshape the global financial system—and reveal whether IPOs represent a truly viable path forward
You may also like

a16z founder's Stanford lecture: Whenever Wall Street and Silicon Valley have different ideas, it's Wall Street that ends up being wrong
Ben Horowitz, co-founder of a16z, delivered a powerful talk: The two traditional moats of software in the AI era have been erased, and entrepreneurs must seek "new barriers" beyond code and UI.

Michael Saylor: After three consecutive quarters of losses, Strategy will sell Bitcoin to pay dividends
After MSTR's financial report showed continued net losses, Saylor changed his stance: Bitcoin is no longer "never to be sold" and can be used as a payment tool.

The toll station at Hormuz and the RMB that cannot be bought
The disorder of the US dollar is giving rise to a new situation in global settlement: gold is being redefined as a "bridge," the CIPS system is expanding rapidly, and global funds are quietly opening up a new channel for the renminbi, which is "hard to obtain."

Interview with Coinbase Institutional's Strategic Head: The Institutionalization of Crypto Reaches a Critical Point
Coinbase executives provide an in-depth analysis: Unfazed by short-term market panic, institutions are accelerating their entry, and tokenization along with the "exchange of everything" is about to completely reconstruct the global financial infrastructure.

Dialogue with Agora CEO Nick: The battle for stablecoin licenses has just begun
Agora strikes: officially applies for a federal trust bank license in the United States, elevating from a stablecoin issuer to "underlying financial infrastructure," targeting the trillion-dollar enterprise payment and B2B settlement market.

Morning Report | a16z Crypto completes $2.2 billion fundraising for its fifth fund; Bullish invests $4.2 billion to acquire share transfer agency Equiniti; PayPal's Q1 performance exceeds expectations
Overview of Important Market Events on May 5th

a16z Crypto: What We See Behind the $2.2 Billion New Fund
After the noise subsides, what remains is often more useful than it appeared at its peak and more enduring than it seemed at its lowest point.

Web3 is dead, Web2+3 should rise
We are not aiming to hold a self-indulgent party for Web3 practitioners, but rather to build a bridge for rational connection between Web2 and Web3.

Stablecoins and Latin American Remittances: The Misunderstood $174 Billion Market
In the Latin American remittance market, the real protagonists have never been the young people speculating on cryptocurrencies, but rather the 50-year-old workers who send money to their mothers every month. They don't care about blockchain; they only care about whether the money has arrived.

The arrival of the Web 3.0 era: A review of Hong Kong court rulings on digital assets
Hong Kong judiciary landmark: The court officially recognizes cryptocurrency as legal property and introduces the "tokenized injunction" to track and freeze involved funds, comprehensively upgrading the protection of digital asset investors.

Track Markets At a Glance: New WEEX Price Widgets for iOS & Android
To streamline your market data access, WEEX has officially launched "Market Watchlist" desktop widgets

The billion-dollar lesson: The focus of DeFi security is shifting from code to operational governance
Warning of nearly $1 billion loss in DeFi: Security pain points have shifted from code vulnerabilities to permissions and operations. Introducing TradFi bank-level risk control and AI defenses is the way to balance openness and security.

A Brief Analysis of Stablecoin Licenses and On-Chain Funding
Hong Kong accelerates the layout of digital finance, providing a panoramic analysis of the evolution of three major on-chain financial forms: central bank digital currency, deposit tokens, and stablecoins, along with future opportunities.

BVNK Founder: Three Stages of Stablecoin Development
Once payments become faster, cheaper, and globally interconnected, stablecoins will not just open up a new market, but a new realm with boundaries that are not yet visible today.

The truth about Trump's son's Bitcoin game: he made a staggering $100 million while retail investors lost $500 million
The Trump family has a family skill: to exaggerate and make something sound bigger than it actually is.

What Is Futures Trading? Hours, Platforms, and How to Start Trade Futures(2026 Guide)
Learn how to start futures trading, understand trading hours, and choose the best futures trading platform. Includes real data, strategies, and ways to maximize returns with rebates.

The Rise of Composable RWA
27 billion RWA funds are undergoing a major reshuffle: U.S. Treasury bonds are "cooling off," while high-yield credit assets are quietly dominating the DeFi lending market with permissionless designs. This article reveals the explosive logic behind composable RWA.

MAGA Up 350% in 24 Hours, PEPE Up 46% in One Day: Which Memecoins Are Next in 2026?
MAGA +350% in 24hrs. PEPE +46% in one day. RAVE +4,500% then -90%. In 2026's memecoin market, the gains are real. So are the traps? Here's how to tell the difference before you buy.
a16z founder's Stanford lecture: Whenever Wall Street and Silicon Valley have different ideas, it's Wall Street that ends up being wrong
Ben Horowitz, co-founder of a16z, delivered a powerful talk: The two traditional moats of software in the AI era have been erased, and entrepreneurs must seek "new barriers" beyond code and UI.
Michael Saylor: After three consecutive quarters of losses, Strategy will sell Bitcoin to pay dividends
After MSTR's financial report showed continued net losses, Saylor changed his stance: Bitcoin is no longer "never to be sold" and can be used as a payment tool.
The toll station at Hormuz and the RMB that cannot be bought
The disorder of the US dollar is giving rise to a new situation in global settlement: gold is being redefined as a "bridge," the CIPS system is expanding rapidly, and global funds are quietly opening up a new channel for the renminbi, which is "hard to obtain."
Interview with Coinbase Institutional's Strategic Head: The Institutionalization of Crypto Reaches a Critical Point
Coinbase executives provide an in-depth analysis: Unfazed by short-term market panic, institutions are accelerating their entry, and tokenization along with the "exchange of everything" is about to completely reconstruct the global financial infrastructure.
Dialogue with Agora CEO Nick: The battle for stablecoin licenses has just begun
Agora strikes: officially applies for a federal trust bank license in the United States, elevating from a stablecoin issuer to "underlying financial infrastructure," targeting the trillion-dollar enterprise payment and B2B settlement market.
Morning Report | a16z Crypto completes $2.2 billion fundraising for its fifth fund; Bullish invests $4.2 billion to acquire share transfer agency Equiniti; PayPal's Q1 performance exceeds expectations
Overview of Important Market Events on May 5th
Customer Support:@weikecs
Business Cooperation:@weikecs
Quant Trading & MM:bd@weex.com
VIP Program:support@weex.com
