EXIO Research Institute | 2026-07-02
The value of some things is never written on the profit and loss statement.
In 2017, when the world was still debating "Is Bitcoin a scam?", Yoshitaka Kitao, the head of Japan's financial giant SBI Holdings, made a bold statement at a small investor meeting: the transformation triggered by blockchain technology will be greater than the internet. Back then, the price of XRP was less than $0.3, and SBI's investment in Ripple was seen by many traditional analysts as "a distraction from their core business". Eight years later, when Kitao spent 46.7 billion yen [1] – equivalent to more than 5 times the profit of SBI's entire crypto business last year [1] – to buy a loss-making cryptocurrency exchange, the market finally began to understand: he was never buying a company, but a ticket into the future of finance.
A 'Non-Profit' Exchange, Why Is It Worth 46.7 Billion?
Let's first look at what is being traded here.
Bitbank, founded in 2014, is one of Japan's oldest licensed exchanges, with a record of zero hacking incidents and ranking high in altcoin liquidity. Sounds good? But the financial statements tell a completely different story: 2025 net sales were 5.82 billion yen [2], down 27% year-on-year [2], while operating profit plummeted to a loss of 970 million yen [2]. A company with declining revenue that turned from profit to loss – why would SBI pay 46.7 billion yen (approx. $289 million) [1] for a full acquisition?
Wall Street investment bank Architect Partners hit the nail on the head: SBI is buying "Franchise Scale", not profitability [7]. This sentence is worth keeping in mind for everyone watching the crypto industry. In Japan, applying for a crypto exchange license from scratch involves facing years of rigorous scrutiny from the Financial Services Agency (FSA), accumulating irreplaceable compliance experience, and investing billions of yen in system security. As of 2026, there are fewer than 30 licensed exchanges in Japan [3], with about 90% of them operating at a loss [3]. What does this mean? It means regulation has raised the barrier so high that the vast majority of players cannot cross it.
SBI's 46.7 billion yen is not buying Bitbank's 5.8 billion yen in annual revenue, but the FSA registration license it took 12 years [4] to obtain, the compliant stock of 960,000 accounts [4], and an established yen fiat gateway. In an increasingly strict regulatory market, licensed scale itself is an independent strategic asset, the value of which cannot be measured by short-term profits.
Under Heavy-Fisted Regulation, Licenses Become Non-Renewable Resources
The timing of this acquisition is no coincidence.
Just 14 days before SBI announced the acquisition [5], on June 11, 2026 [5], Japan's House of Representatives passed an amendment to the Financial Instruments and Exchange Act, moving crypto asset regulation from the Payment Services Act framework to the same level as stocks and bonds under the Financial Instruments and Exchange Act. Crypto assets were formally redefined as "Financial Instruments," with bans on insider trading, issuer disclosure obligations, and significantly strengthened penalties—the maximum prison sentence for unlicensed operation increased directly from 3 years to 10 years [6], and the maximum fine soared from 3 million yen to 10 million yen [6].
Architect Partners predicts that with the implementation of this amendment, up to half of the registered exchanges may eventually exit or merge [7]. In other words, the number of Japanese crypto exchanges may further shrink from less than 30 to around 15 [7]. Existing licenses are transforming from "operational permits" into "non-renewable resources." You can open a new restaurant, but you can no longer open a new, compliant cryptocurrency exchange in Japan—the window of opportunity has closed.
SBI's payment of approximately 8 times revenue multiple [8] may seem expensive, but Coinbase's acquisition of Deribit at a 9.7x revenue multiple [8] is not far off. Global capital is voting with real money: the valuation logic for licensed platforms in clear regulatory markets has fundamentally changed. It's not valued by profit, but by "scarcity."
Global License Rush: 144 M&A Deals Worth $11.8 Billion in 2026
Japan's script is not an isolated case. Globally, the crypto industry has recorded 144 M&A transactions totaling $11.8 billion so far in 2026 [9], as banks, payment giants, and exchanges are frantically acquiring regulated digital asset businesses. Mastercard's $1.8 billion acquisition of stablecoin infrastructure provider BVNK [10], Bullish's $4.2 billion acquisition of Equiniti [11]—each deal illustrates the same thing: *Buying a license is faster, cheaper, and more controllable than building one.*
This is a global "compliance arms race." As the US passes the GENIUS Act to legislate stablecoins, Hong Kong's Securities and Futures Commission deepens its virtual asset trading platform licensing regime, and Singapore's Monetary Authority tightens exchange licensing standards, the words "licensed" are transforming from a cost center into a value moat. For platforms that have already crossed the threshold and built compliance capabilities, regulation is not a constraint but the strongest defensive fortification.
Looking back at the Japanese market, SBI's M&A path is clear: absorbing TaoTao in 2020, taking over DMM Bitcoin client assets in 2024, acquiring BITPoint Japan for 12.75 billion yen in 2022 [12], and now acquiring Bitbank for 46.7 billion yen. Each step is about using capital to buy time—while others are still queuing for licenses, SBI has already brought Japan's top three exchanges under its umbrella. The merged platform will custody approximately 1.1 trillion yen in assets and 2.92 million accounts [13], solidly securing the number one position in Japan.
Other Markets' Today Is Japan's Yesterday
At this point in the story, you might ask: what does this have to do with us?
The connection is this: Japan's market today is other markets' tomorrow.
When Japan formally brings crypto assets under financial instrument regulation, when global traditional financial institutions shift from watching to acquiring, when the number of licenses goes from "limited" to "scarce"—for example, the same logic is playing out in Hong Kong. Since the Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission launched its virtual asset trading platform licensing regime in 2023, the "franchise value" of licensed platforms has been rapidly becoming evident. The stablecoin issuer licensing regime is already in place, spot crypto ETFs are trading, and more compliant products are on the way.
In an era where regulation is pushing the industry from wild growth to meticulous cultivation, the real moat is not trading volume, not speed of listing coins, but *compliance itself*. Those platforms that have already crossed the threshold and built compliance capabilities have, in turn, gained the strongest moat. This is not a victory of traffic, but a victory of franchise.
In Hong Kong, despite relatively quiet market conditions overall, the operational licensed platforms are in a "Franchise Scale" value window similar to Japan's SBI. Brand recognition, compliance heritage, technical infrastructure, and user base—in the wave of traditional financial institutions entering in force, these are strategic assets that cannot be quickly replicated. When licenses become a resource scarcer than gold, those who got their hands on them early hold the entry ticket to the future of finance.
The answer SBI gave with 46.7 billion yen aligns with the logic of every platform persevering in markets undergoing regulatory clarification: Compliance is not a cost; it is the moat of long-term value.
And when more New Money or Old Money realizes this, the cheapest window to get on board may have already closed.





