# IPO Related Articles

HTX News Center provides the latest articles and in-depth analysis on "IPO", covering market trends, project updates, tech developments, and regulatory policies in the crypto industry.

Crypto Morning Brief: Bitcoin Breaks Through $70,000, Kraken Granted Access to Fed's Core Payment System

Crypto Daily: Bitcoin Surpasses $70,000, Kraken Gains Access to Fed Payment System Key market developments include Bitcoin breaking $70,000 and Kraken becoming the first crypto company approved to access the Federal Reserve’s core payment system. In U.S. economic updates, February ADP employment rose to 63,000, exceeding expectations. President Trump nominated Kevin Warsh as Federal Reserve Chair; Warsh has previously expressed that Bitcoin is better suited as a store of value than a currency. Major U.S. regulators submitted a crypto industry oversight plan to the White House. Notable industry moves: Coinbase launched stock trading with extended hours, Backpack introduced on-chain IPO subscriptions on Solana, and Sui’s native stablecoin USDsui went live, with yields benefiting the Sui ecosystem. Corporate Bitcoin strategies clarified: MARA Holdings denied plans to sell its 53,822 BTC, while Chinese firm JZXN announced intent to acquire 10,000 BTC despite its small market cap. Venture firm a16z is raising $2 billion for its fifth crypto fund. Recommended reads cover topics including AI’s market impact, gold and crypto as hedges, semiconductor market volatility, and SpaceX’s potential IPO. Amid traditional market declines, cryptocurrencies demonstrated resilience, reinforcing Bitcoin’s role as digital gold in uncertain geopolitical climates.

marsbit03/05 02:07

Crypto Morning Brief: Bitcoin Breaks Through $70,000, Kraken Granted Access to Fed's Core Payment System

marsbit03/05 02:07

Behind RedotPay's Potential US Listing: The Structural Logic and Regulatory Boundaries of a Stablecoin Payment Platform

RedotPay, a Hong Kong-based stablecoin payment platform, is reportedly considering a U.S. IPO with a potential valuation exceeding $4 billion. This move highlights broader questions about how such platforms structure their operations across regulatory boundaries. Beyond functioning as a simple payment card, RedotPay operates as an integrated financial account system offering services including custody, crypto swaps, lending, remittances, and yield-earning products. Its legal structure involves multiple entities across jurisdictions (Hong Kong, Panama, Argentina, and the U.S.), each handling specific services under distinct regulatory frameworks. For instance, its Crypto Earn service is explicitly not offered to Hong Kong residents and is managed by its Panama entity. The platform’s terms of service clearly define fund usage—such as pooled and non-segregated assets in its Earn product—and acknowledge credit functions, aligning with credit card logic in certain regions. While RedotPay explicitly disclaims being a bank or a stored value facility, regulatory scrutiny will likely focus on functional realities rather than contractual disclaimers. An IPO would subject RedotPay to intense scrutiny regarding legal structure consistency, customer asset handling, risk disclosure, and alignment between growth narratives and compliance practices. The company’s emphasis on detailed legal terms and jurisdictional clarity may strengthen its position, but the key challenge remains demonstrating that its multi-entity framework can withstand regulatory and investor due diligence. Ultimately, RedotPay’s a trend in PayFi where success depends not only on product innovation but also on the ability to maintain legally robust and explainable operational structures across diverse regulatory environments.

marsbit03/01 01:32

Behind RedotPay's Potential US Listing: The Structural Logic and Regulatory Boundaries of a Stablecoin Payment Platform

marsbit03/01 01:32

OpenAI Is Turning AI into a Nuclear Arms Race That Ordinary People Can't Afford

In a record-breaking funding round, OpenAI has secured $110 billion, raising its post-money valuation to $840 billion. This investment, led by Amazon, NVIDIA, and SoftBank, marks the largest-ever private tech funding and signals a new phase in the global AI race—one defined by extreme capital concentration and geopolitical significance. The scale of funding dwarfs the GDP of many mid-sized nations and equals nearly half of NVIDIA’s annual revenue. It also accounts for more than half of all AI startup funding in 2025, accelerating an industry-wide arms race in compute, talent, and model development. This capital influx, however, risks widening the gap between giants and smaller players, potentially stifling innovation and increasing market consolidation. Strategic investors are not merely providing capital: Amazon’s $50 billion commitment includes an eight-year, $100 billion cloud expansion deal. SoftBank’s $30 billion staged investment serves as both a hedge and a bridge for future sovereign wealth entrants. NVIDIA’s $30 billion replaces an earlier partnership promise and effectively locks up its advanced GPU supply, creating a closed loop that sidelines competitors. Despite ChatGPT reaching 900 million weekly active users and 50 million paid subscribers, OpenAI’s burn rate remains high. It spent $0.62 for every dollar earned in 2025, with cumulative cash burn projected to hit $1150 billion by 2029. At the same time, its market share is eroding amid rising competition from Google’s Gemini and Musk’s Grok. Facing mounting financial pressure, OpenAI is eyeing a potential IPO in Q4 2026. The offering could mark either the peak of the AI investment bubble or the beginning of the AGI era—but for now, the world watches as OpenAI races against capital, competition, and time.

marsbit02/28 11:46

OpenAI Is Turning AI into a Nuclear Arms Race That Ordinary People Can't Afford

marsbit02/28 11:46

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