Bullish, a Cayman Islands-based digital asset exchange, has filed to go public on the New York Stock Exchange under the proposed ticker BLSH. The company is offering 20.3 million ordinary shares at a price range of $28.00 to $31.00, implying a deal size of approximately $597 million and a post-offering market capitalization of roughly $4.0 billion. Lead underwriters include J.P. Morgan, Jefferies, and Citigroup, with co-managers such as Deutsche Bank Securities, Cantor, Canaccord Genuity, and Rosenblatt.
**UPDATE 8/11/25 BLSH now aims to raise $975 million by offering 30 million shares at $32 to $33 per share — a 62.8% jump from its original plan of 20.3 million shares at $28 to $31.**
Bullish is backed by institutional giants like BlackRock and ARK Investment Management, both of which have indicated interest in purchasing up to $200 million worth of shares in the IPO — a vote of confidence in the company’s institutional-grade platform.
Offering Structure and Use of Proceeds
Bullish is pursuing a traditional IPO and qualifies as a foreign private issuer, which provides reduced SEC reporting obligations. The proceeds from the offering are expected to support Bullish’s international expansion, technology platform growth, and general working capital. The offering does not include any selling shareholders.
The underwriters have a 30-day option to purchase an additional 3.05 million shares, potentially increasing the offering size to 23.35 million shares. Public float and dilution impact are not explicitly disclosed, though the offering will significantly broaden outside ownership.
Business Description
Bullish operates a regulated crypto exchange platform that combines features of traditional finance (order book trading) with DeFi-style automated market making, providing deep liquidity and transparency. Its platform is built on a private blockchain and serves institutional and high-net-worth clients.
Key features and subsidiaries include:
The company operates under a self-custody model where entities may only hold their own assets unless using Bullish Custody for third-party protection. Over 250 billion USD in cumulative trading volume has been processed through the platform.
Company History
Bullish is part of the Bullish Group, formed by Block.one and other stakeholders. The company launched its platform in 2021 and expanded through the creation of regulatory-compliant subsidiaries across Asia, the U.S., and Europe. It has not disclosed any major mergers or acquisitions but benefits from a capital-heavy founding structure backed by early crypto leaders.
Risk Factors
Bullish outlines multiple risk categories in its filing:
Additionally, Bullish’s foreign private issuer status reduces its reporting obligations, which could affect investor transparency.
Growth Initiatives and Outlook
Bullish is focused on:
Future growth will depend heavily on regulatory clarity and adoption by institutions.
Comparable Companies
Bullish competes with a mix of centralized and decentralized exchanges:
Bullish’s valuation remains undisclosed, but with revenues in the low hundreds of millions, it likely seeks a valuation well below Coinbase’s, which trades at higher revenue multiples due to its U.S. compliance and retail scale.
Investor Sentiment and Strategic Implications
Interest from BlackRock and ARK Invest supports the IPO’s institutional credibility. The midpoint pricing ($29.50) is ambitious but not outlandish given the 2023 rebound in crypto markets. Bullish is expected to be weighted heavily toward institutional allocation, particularly as a foreign private issuer.
Post-IPO Strategy
Bullish intends to:
Bullish will debut on the NYSE on August 13th, 2025