Author: Oluwapelumi Adejumo
Compiled by: Deep Chao TechFlow
Deep Chao's Guide: The ongoing decline of BTC is forcing crypto companies to conduct large-scale layoffs, but it is also spawning the most aggressive wave of mergers and acquisitions in the industry's history - with transaction volumes reaching $9.4 billion in the first half of 2026, 26 times the volume from the same period last year. Traditional financial institutions are no longer building their own infrastructure but are instead directly acquiring licenses, custody solutions, and payment rails. This divergence reveals the true direction of capital flow during a bear market.
Bitcoin's prolonged downturn is forcing cryptocurrency companies to cut staff, automate more tasks, and abandon expansion plans formulated during the last bull run. Simultaneously, it is creating one of the busiest periods for acquisitions in the sector's history.
In the second quarter of 2026, cryptocurrency M&A deals reached $7.23 billion, up from $2.14 billion in the first quarter.
The total transaction value for the two quarters reached $9.37 billion. Data from CryptoRank shows that the overall growth in the first half of the year was 26 times higher than the same period last year, highlighting a dramatic acceleration in deal activity even as spot market conditions worsen.

This acceleration is occurring against a backdrop of Bitcoin trading near its lowest levels in nearly two years and continued layoffs at some of the industry's largest employers.
This divergence shows where capital is flowing during the downturn – companies are spending less on broad hiring and speculative growth.
Instead, traditional financial institutions, banks, card networks, trading firms, and well-funded crypto businesses are acquiring payment systems, regulatory licenses, custody businesses, and market infrastructure that could take years to build internally.
The result is a bear market that is weakening many crypto companies but not eliminating institutional demand for their technology.
Traditional Finance Drives Wave of Crypto Infrastructure Acquisitions
Traditional financial institutions are driving the wave of crypto acquisitions, opting to buy fully-fledged digital asset infrastructure rather than building compliance and technical systems from scratch.
Banks, payment processors, and fintech companies are actively targeting startups that already possess custody solutions, payment rails, and regulatory approvals.
This acquisition frenzy is largely driven by the stabilization of global policy. The European Union's Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) framework establishes unified licensing standards, while ongoing stablecoin legislation in the US gives corporate giants the confidence to make long-term bets.
Legal and consulting experts point to this policy support as a primary catalyst. According to Architect Partners' Q1 Crypto M&A and Financing Report, banking and securities industries are fully embracing blockchain, repositioning the technology as a foundational layer for traditional financial markets.
Mastercard's $1.8 billion acquisition of stablecoin company BVNK is a prime example. This acquisition gave the card network immediate access to the technology and licenses needed to process stablecoin payments, bypassing years of internal development.
Other Wall Street giants are also securing strategic footholds through targeted investments. Intercontinental Exchange backed prediction platform Polymarket, Citadel Securities invested in brokerage services provider Alpaca, and Standard Chartered's venture arm funded market maker Keyrock.
Asset managers are also capturing institutional demand through direct acquisitions. Franklin Templeton, which manages $1.7 trillion in assets, recently launched a dedicated digital assets unit called Franklin Crypto.
This move was executed via the acquisition of 250 Digital, which absorbed the firm's investment team and previously managed liquid crypto strategies under CoinFund, to offer actively managed cryptocurrency products directly to Franklin Templeton's global client base.
Overall, private capital strongly favors businesses that connect blockchain to the wider financial system. First-quarter financing data reveals a clear investor preference for stablecoin utility—such as foreign exchange, corporate payments, and cross-border settlement—over speculative crypto-native projects.
In this environment, regulatory credentials have become a major competitive barrier. Acquisition targets with broker-dealer capabilities, federal banking charters, or registered investment advisor qualifications, including Alpaca, Anchorage, and Superstate, attract stronger buyer interest as they provide immediate operational legitimacy.
While traditional finance demonstrates its balance sheet strength, blockchain networks are quietly emerging as a new class of aggressive buyers.
Historically, Layer 1 and Layer 2 networks relied on independent developers to build applications on their chains. Now, faced with fierce competition for users, these networks are directly purchasing consumer-facing applications.
Polygon's recent acquisitions of Coinme and Sequence highlight this shift. By buying payment channels and wallet infrastructure, the blockchain is securing an end-to-end user experience and locking in transaction volume, suggesting that technical capability alone is insufficient to maintain market share.
Crypto Layoffs Deepen, AI and Compliance Reshape Workforce
The pace of corporate acquisitions starkly contrasts with the continued contraction of the digital asset labor market.
According to data compiled by Tiger Research for June 2026, the industry currently has only 2,932 active job openings globally.

This figure pales in comparison to the aggressive hiring sprees of 2021 and early 2022, when trading platforms, DeFi protocols, and NFT markets were all expanding headcount simultaneously.
The employment shrinkage began during the market downturn of 2022 and accelerated after the FTX collapse, leading to roughly a 40% decline in job openings across North America and Europe. The market has not rebounded to previous highs.
Indeed, layoffs have been steadily continuing throughout the first half of this year. Major platforms including Gemini, Coinbase, Kraken, Algorand, Crypto.com, and most recently, the Ethereum Foundation, have initiated new rounds of job cuts.
Executives have attributed the cuts to low token valuations, broader macroeconomic pressures, and AI-driven operational efficiencies. Specifically, Coinbase framed its restructuring as a shift towards an "AI-native" operational model.
This technological pivot is evident in the hiring data: the proportion of crypto jobs requiring AI skills has more than doubled in a year, surging from 23% in early 2025 to over 53% by March 2026.

While overall hiring remains sluggish, the composition of the workforce is undergoing a fundamental change. Companies are not implementing a complete hiring freeze. Instead, they are actively narrowing their focus to technical and regulatory expertise.
According to Tiger Research, engineering roles constitute approximately 34% of active openings, while legal and compliance roles account for about 10%. This shift is more pronounced at centralized exchanges, where compliance positions make up 16% of vacancies—more than double the share for sales and business development roles.
This indicates these companies are prioritizing staffing needs to obtain licenses, manage risk, and maintain core infrastructure, while reducing spending on marketing and community growth.
Furthermore, the limited hiring that exists is highly concentrated among a few heavyweights rather than distributed across early-stage startups. Centralized exchanges generate nearly one-third of all open positions.
Stablecoin and payments divisions account for another significant portion, but this activity is highly concentrated. Tether and Ripple alone constitute over 80% of listings in that category.
Ultimately, the data paints a picture of targeted corporate restructuring and a defensive posture, not an industry-wide labor market recovery.
Distressed Crypto Companies Become Acquisition Targets
Blockworks' recent acquisition of Messari perfectly embodies the intersection of large-scale layoffs and accelerated consolidation.
The crypto analytics company Blockworks acquired the analytics provider for approximately $10 million, a significant markdown from its $300 million valuation following a 2022 funding round. Prior to the sale, the research firm underwent three separate rounds of layoffs starting in 2023.
Shortening runways and slow revenue growth are forcing smaller businesses to the negotiating table, enabling well-funded buyers to absorb specialized talent, proprietary data, and distribution channels for a fraction of their former private market valuations.
Industry analysts expect these financial pressures to soon ripple into digital asset treasury sectors. Throughout 2025, many public treasury entities successfully raised capital by trading at a premium relative to their crypto reserves.
Meanwhile, the M&A wave may also eventually encompass Decentralized Autonomous Organizations, thanks to maturing legal frameworks.
Recent legislative progress, such as Wyoming's Decentralized Unincorporated Nonprofit Association (DUNA) structure, provides DAOs with a recognized legal mechanism to hold off-chain assets and intellectual property.
With clearer governance and ownership, protocol treasuries are better positioned to acquire complementary software projects or specialized development teams.
However, compared to the traditional, compliance-driven corporate acquisitions dominating the current market cycle, these decentralized mergers remain highly experimental.
Capital Remains Available, But Has Become Discerning
Despite nearly $10 billion in crypto deal activity in the first half of 2026, capital allocation has become more discerning.
A notable exception to this strict institutional focus is the prediction markets sector. Event-betting platforms have secured significant funding commitments as they vie for mainstream dominance.
For context, Kalshi is reportedly negotiating a funding round that would value the federally regulated exchange at $40 billion, nearly double its previous $22 billion price tag. Polymarket has also absorbed substantial backing as competition for prediction market supremacy intensifies.
However, outside of predictions, the venture capital thesis has narrowed dramatically. Capital is overwhelmingly flowing to businesses acting as bridges between digital assets and the traditional financial system.
Tokenization firms and institutional trading venues secure large checks because they pitch sustainable, isolated revenue models: charging banks, brokerages, and asset managers fees for regulated services, rather than relying on fickle retail crypto traders. Superstate recently closed an $82.5 million funding round to expand its blockchain-based securities issuance, while Alpaca dominates in settling tokenized US stocks and ETFs.
This funding trajectory indicates investors are shifting bets from conceptual tokenization pilots to live, regulated financial products.
Notably, pure DeFi protocols and experimental base-layer blockchains are entirely absent from this quarter's major funding rounds.
This selective deployment of venture capital mirrors the broader M&A trend. Liquidity exists, but it is ring-fenced for startups with regulatory licenses, institutional distribution channels, and specific utility for traditional finance.
The bear market is effectively pruning the industry, forcing weaker models to consolidate or cut staff, while richly rewarding the infrastructure providers built to weather the crypto winter.







