HashKey crypto exchange opens Hong Kong IPO subscription, targets $215M

cointelegraphPubblicato 2025-12-09Pubblicato ultima volta 2025-12-09

Introduzione

HashKey Group, operator of one of Hong Kong’s licensed cryptocurrency exchanges, has opened subscriptions for its initial public offering (IPO), aiming to raise up to HK$1.67 billion ($214.7 million). The IPO is scheduled to debut on December 17 on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange (HKEX). The company is offering 240.6 million shares priced between $0.76 and $0.89 each, which could value HashKey at $2.46 billion at the upper end of the range. Founded in 2018, HashKey has become Hong Kong’s largest crypto exchange, capturing an estimated 75% market share. As of September 30, it had facilitated $167 billion in cumulative spot trading volume. The exchange offers a range of services including spot trading, OTC, staking, and tokenization, and also operates an Ethereum layer-2 network called HashKey Chain. The IPO is backed by prominent sponsors such as JPMorgan and Guotai Junan. Proceeds will be used to expand ecosystem infrastructure, enhance risk management, and support talent acquisition. The offering comes amid a significant increase in IPO activity in Hong Kong, with HKEX reporting a 209% year-on-year rise in funds raised in 2025.

HashKey Group, operator of one of Hong Kong’s licensed crypto exchanges, has opened subscriptions for its initial public offering (IPO) ahead of an expected listing next week.

HashKey is seeking to raise up to 1.67 billion Hong Kong dollars ($214.7 million) in an IPO that is scheduled to debut on Dec. 17, according to a prospectus filed with the Hong Kong Stock Exchange (HKEX) on Tuesday.

The company is offering 240.6 million shares at $0.76–$0.89 each, which would bring HashKey’s valuation to $2.46 billion at the top of the range.

With the subscription period beginning today, investors can apply for HashKey shares online through the HK eIPO White Form or using an electronic application via HKEX’s digital IPO settlement platform FINI until Friday.

HashKey’s rapid path to IPO after three years of operation

Founded in 2018, HashKey has grown into Hong Kong’s largest crypto exchange, reportedly capturing a 75% market share, or more than three times that of its nearest competitor.

After commencing operations and obtaining key regulatory approvals in Hong Kong in 2022, HashKey entered full-scale operations in 2023.

According to its prospectus, HashKey had facilitated $167 billion in cumulative spot trading volume as of Sept. 30.

HashKey’s IPO prospectus filed with the HKEX on Tuesday. Source: HKEX

HashKey offers a wide range of digital asset services to both institutional and retail investors, including spot exchange, over-the-counter (OTC) trades, staking and tokenization. It also operates HashKey Chain, an Ethereum layer-2 network designed for real-world assets (RWAs), stablecoins and decentralized applications.

The company has also emerged as the largest Asian, Hong Kong-based asset management provider in 2024, with $1 billion in assets under management as of Sept. 30, the prospectus states.

Related: Bitkub exchange eyes Hong Kong IPO as Thai markets slump to 5-year lows: Report

HashKey’s IPO is backed by high-profile sponsors, including major US investment bank JPMorgan and local financial institutions such as Guotai Junan.

The IPO proceeds are planned to go toward scaling its ecosystem and infrastructure, bolstering risk management and hiring talent, the filing notes.

HashKey’s public offering comes amid a continued IPO boom in Hong Kong, with HKEX reporting a 209% year-on-year increase in funds raised through IPOs in 2025, totaling $27.8 billion in the first months of the year.

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Rebuttal: I Don't Regret Spending 8 Years in the Crypto Industry

Ken Chang recently wrote an article lamenting his eight years in crypto as a waste, describing the industry as inherently destructive and a system of financial nihilism that has built the world's largest casino. While many in the space dismiss such critiques, the author acknowledges that Ken’s disillusionment—shared by earlier figures like Mike Hearn—stems from a genuine idealistic disappointment. Crypto promised decentralization and a new financial system but largely delivered speculation and gambling. The author identifies five core aspirations of cryptocurrency: restoring sound money, encoding business logic via smart contracts, making digital property real, improving capital market efficiency, and expanding global financial inclusion. While progress has been made in areas like Bitcoin, stablecoins, and certain efficient financial infrastructures, many grand visions—like overthrowing fiat or revolutionizing digital ownership—remain unfulfilled. The author advocates for a "pragmatic optimism." Speculation and casino-like dynamics are seen as unfortunate but inevitable side effects of building permissionless, open financial infrastructure. The key is to focus on the real, albeit gradual, progress—such as improved financial access and inclusion—while accepting that transformative change is slow and often captured by incremental efficiency gains, not revolution. The goal remains worthy, even if the path is messier than hoped.

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Rebuttal: I Don't Regret Spending 8 Years in the Crypto Industry

marsbit11 min fa

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