M&A Deals in the Crypto Market Are Unusually Active
Title: M&A Activity in Crypto Market Becomes Unusually Active
A rare signal is emerging in the crypto primary market: mergers and acquisitions (M&A) are nearing half of all financing deals. According to RootData, this month, M&A cases in the crypto industry reached 10, while financing rounds numbered only 14, meaning M&A accounts for approximately 42% of primary market transactions—the highest level in history.
This does not signal a sudden industry boom. Instead, the rapid rise in M&A share primarily reflects the continued downturn in the financing market. Since November 2024, monthly crypto M&A deals have remained between 10-20, while financing deals have plummeted from around 100 to about 50, possibly hitting a new low this month.
For project teams, this means the traditional path of relying on narratives, token expectations, and ecosystem subsidies to maintain valuations is narrowing. For leading companies, it presents a rare window to acquire teams, licenses, technology, liquidity, and market access at lower prices, with less competition and stronger bargaining power.
Key active buyers include Coinbase, Kraken, Ripple, MoonPay, Polymarket, Kaiko, Sol Strategies, GSR, Keyrock, Jupiter, Paxos, and Ondo Finance. Their M&A logic is consistent: acquiring key capabilities at lower costs during the industry downturn. This is driven by more attractive valuations, reduced time and trial-and-error costs, the acquisition of licenses and compliance resources, and the integration of industry upstream and downstream segments.
Current M&A focuses are concentrated in four areas: trading infrastructure (e.g., Coinbase acquiring Deribit, Kraken acquiring NinjaTrader), payments and stablecoins (e.g., MoonPay, Ripple expanding payment networks), compliance licenses, and asset issuance/distribution (e.g., acquisitions related to RWA and token issuance platforms like Coinbase's purchases of Liquifi and Echo).
The rise in M&A is altering the primary market's exit logic. It provides an alternative path to the token-dependent model, encouraging teams to build tangible products, revenue, and strategic value that can be integrated. This could inject confidence into the market, showing that asset buyers and exit possibilities still exist, albeit with a stricter focus on real utility.
However, this trend also indicates the crypto industry is becoming more centralized. As asset issuance, trading, market-making, custody, payments, and data gradually consolidate in the hands of a few major players, the industry's initial emphasis on openness and anti-monopoly is being reshaped by commercial realities. Coupled with rising compliance barriers, this signals the end of the low-barrier era for crypto entrepreneurship.
链捕手9 мин. назад