# Сопутствующие статьи по теме Wall Street

Новостной центр HTX предлагает последние статьи и углубленный анализ по "Wall Street", охватывающие рыночные тренды, новости проектов, развитие технологий и политику регулирования в криптоиндустрии.

Four Months to Ring the Bell: Crypto Custody Pioneer BitGo Showcases Financial Engineering in IPO

BitGo, a leading cryptocurrency custody provider, has successfully completed its initial public offering (IPO) on January 22, 2026, marking the first major crypto IPO of the year. The listing was celebrated with a high-profile lights show in Manhattan and the donation of a framed Bitcoin whitepaper to the NYSE. The company priced its shares at $18, above the initial target range, raising approximately $213 million. Despite an initial 35% surge on the first trading day, the stock later fell below the offering price, with a market cap briefly exceeding $2.8 billion. BitGo also introduced tokenized shares in partnership with Ondo Global Markets, enabling trading on multiple blockchains. Founded in 2013 by Mike Belshe, BitGo pioneered multi-signature wallets and regulated custody services. It has since expanded into a comprehensive financial platform offering trading, lending, and prime brokerage services. The company currently safeguards over $82 billion in assets for more than 5,100 institutional clients globally. While BitGo reported substantial revenue growth—$10 billion in the first nine months of 2025, up from $1.9 billion a year earlier—its net profit margin remained thin at just 0.35%. Critics, including Primitive Ventures’ Dovey Wan, argue that the revenue is largely inflated by GAAP accounting from client trading volume, with real earnings being significantly lower. Key risks include high client concentration in its lending book. Despite mixed analyst views, BitGo’s IPO is seen as a milestone in the institutional adoption of crypto. Several major crypto firms, including Kraken and ConsenSys, are expected to follow with their own public listings.

marsbit01/24 02:03

Four Months to Ring the Bell: Crypto Custody Pioneer BitGo Showcases Financial Engineering in IPO

marsbit01/24 02:03

Wall Street 'Withdraws' from Bitcoin Basis Arbitrage: CME Falls Out of Favor, the Golden Age of Arbitrage Comes to an End

Wall Street is retreating from the once-lucrative Bitcoin basis trade, as narrowing spreads between spot and futures prices have made the strategy barely profitable. The cash-and-carry trade, which involved buying Bitcoin spot (often via ETFs) and selling futures to capture the premium, has seen annualized returns drop to around 5%, down from nearly 17% a year ago, barely covering funding and execution costs. This compression has led to a significant shift in market structure: CME's Bitcoin futures open interest has fallen below Binance's for the first time since 2023, indicating a withdrawal of hedge funds and large US accounts from this specific arbitrage strategy. While CME was the preferred venue for this institutional trade, Binance's dominance in perpetual futures has remained steady. The approval of spot Bitcoin ETFs initially fueled the trade's popularity but also accelerated its decline by attracting capital that quickly eroded the arbitrage opportunity. The market is now maturing, with participants shifting from simple leveraged directional bets to using options, hedges, and expressing views through diverse instruments like ETFs. This increased efficiency has naturally narrowed price disparities between venues. As the era of easy, high returns from basis trading ends, participants are expected to seek more complex strategies in decentralized markets and other crypto assets.

marsbit01/22 11:34

Wall Street 'Withdraws' from Bitcoin Basis Arbitrage: CME Falls Out of Favor, the Golden Age of Arbitrage Comes to an End

marsbit01/22 11:34

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