Peter Thiel-Backed Bullish Aims for Blockbuster IPO—Now Targeting $4.8B Valuation
Bullish, the crypto exchange heavyweight backed by Silicon Valley titan Peter Thiel, just upped the ante. Its IPO ambitions just got a turbocharge—now eyeing a $4.8 billion valuation. Wall Street’s watching. Crypto’s waiting. And the skeptics? They’re already drafting the ‘overhyped’ tweets.
Why the surge? Bullish isn’t just riding the crypto wave—it’s betting the house on institutional adoption. With Thiel’s Midas touch and a war chest of liquidity, the exchange is positioning itself as the Goldman Sachs of digital assets. Or at least trying to.
But let’s not ignore the elephant in the room: another ‘unicorn’ valuation in an industry where ‘disruption’ often means ‘disappointment.’ Still, if Bullish pulls this off, it could rewrite the rules—or just add another chapter to crypto’s boom-and-bust saga.
Bullish’s stablecoin strategy and the crypto IPO gold rush
Bullish’s amended SEC filing reveals plans to convert a “significant portion” of the $990 million proceeds into dollar-pegged stablecoins, a move that mirrors the growing trend of public companies using crypto treasuries.
The exchange’s filing indicates coordination with one or more stablecoin issuers, signaling a bet that fiat-pegged digital assets can offer greater flexibility in a volatile crypto market. This approach also underscores how crypto-native firms are rewriting the rulebook on capital management.
Bullish’s upsized offering aligns with a sweeping wave of crypto IPOs energized by a sector market cap now hovering above $4 trillion. The recent surge follows a string of regulatory wins under the TRUMP administration, which has pushed a pro-crypto agenda reversing years of industry skepticism.
Stablecoin issuer Circle, which went public in June, has seen its shares surge 93%, a bullish signal for others waiting in the wings, including Gemini and Grayscale.
But Bullish’s ambitions also highlight a stark reality: despite its $4.8 billion target, the exchange still falls short of its $9 billion valuation attempt during the 2021 SPAC frenzy. That gap reflects both the market’s maturation and the lingering skepticism crypto businesses face when courting public investors.