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Blockchain.com Filed Confidential IPO Paperwork With The SEC

Published May 22, 2026
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Summary:
  • Blockchain.com confidentially filed a draft S-1 with the SEC for a U.S. IPO.
  • The share count and price range haven't been set yet.
  • The filing comes as several other crypto firms - Kraken, Consensys, Ledger - have paused or delayed their own IPO plans.

The crypto IPO window was supposed to be wide open this year. Most of the names everyone expected to file have backed off.

Blockchain.com just filed anyway.

What The Filing Says

Blockchain.com - a crypto financial services company founded in 2011 - confidentially submitted a draft Form S-1 to the SEC, according to a PR Newswire release. The number of shares and the price range haven't been set, and the listing is still subject to SEC review and market conditions.

A confidential filing lets companies start the SEC's review process without making the financial details public yet. It typically takes two to three months, after which the company can choose to move forward when the market looks right.

Blockchain.com offers a crypto exchange, wallets, and institutional trading and lending. CEO Peter Smith held talks last year about going public through a SPAC merger before pivoting to a traditional IPO route - the same route taken by other recent IPOs that priced this year.

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Why The Timing Is Strange

Crypto firms came into 2026 expecting a blockbuster year for IPOs. Circle and Bullish, the parent company of CoinDesk, both went public in 2025 to strong demand, and the pipeline behind them looked deep.

That pipeline has now stalled. Weak trading volumes, soft post-listing performance from names like BitGo, and broader risk-off sentiment have pushed several big crypto IPO candidates onto the sidelines:

  • Payward (the parent of Kraken) paused its multi-billion-dollar listing in March
  • Consensys delayed its potential IPO until fall
  • Ledger, the hardware wallet maker, also pressed pause this month

Blockchain.com is the first major crypto firm in months to actually file rather than retreat. That's a signal worth reading - companies don't file confidentially unless they intend to follow through within a reasonable window.

Crypto's risk profile has also changed over the past year, with growing concerns about security and consumer protection adding another layer of scrutiny for any company seeking to go public.

Worth Watching

The confidential filing buys Blockchain.com a window. It can wait for the market to improve before pulling the trigger, or pull the trigger as soon as the SEC clears the paperwork.

The timing tells you something about how Peter Smith reads the next two to three months. If he thought the window was getting smaller, he'd be holding back. He's not.

If you want to follow the next move in crypto's listing pipeline, sign up for Market Briefs - delivered every morning, with a 45-minute investing course thrown in.

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