Asset management giant Grayscale is the latest crypto firm to delay its plans to go public due to market conditions, according to a person with knowledge of the matter.
The Stamford-based investment firm has paused its IPO preparations and is unlikely to restart the process until the fourth quarter at the earliest, the person said, speaking on condition of anonymity as the matter is private.
Grayscale, a subsidiary of DCG and one of the world’s largest crypto asset managers, is the firm behind the Bitcoin Trust ETF (GBTC). It filed confidentially for a U.S. IPO in November last year. “Due to the SEC-mandated quiet period, we are unable to comment at this time,” a Grayscale spokesperson said in emailed comments.
Crypto firms entered 2026 anticipating a breakout year for IPOs after successful public listings from companies such as Circle (CRCL) and Bullish (BLSH) helped revive investor interest in digital-asset businesses. Since then, however, worsening market conditions, softer trading activity, and underwhelming post-listing performance from newly public firms including BitGo (BTGO) have tempered enthusiasm for additional digital asset IPOs.
Several major crypto firms — including Payward, the parent company of Kraken; Ethereum software developer Consensys; and hardware wallet manufacturer Ledger — have also delayed their IPO plans while waiting for market conditions to stabilize.
Still, some firms are pressing ahead. Blockchain.com said last week that it had confidentially filed for a U.S. IPO with the SEC.
Grayscale’s Ethereum Staking Mini ETF ranked as the top-performing U.S. ETP for Ethereum in the first quarter of 2026, drawing $337 million in inflows as of March 31, according to Bloomberg data. Despite a broader downturn in crypto markets, the firm has moved to convert or uplist 10 digital asset investment products into exchange-traded products since fall 2025.
Source: Grayscale Pauses IPO Plans, Unlikely to Restart Before Q4