BitGo Prices IPO at $18, Valued at $2.1B Ahead of NYSE Debut

BitGo priced its initial public offering at $18 per share late Wednesday, beating its marketed range of $15 to $17. The digital asset custodian raised approximately $212.8 million and is set to begin trading on the New York Stock Exchange today under the ticker BTGO.

The Numbers

The Palo Alto-based firm sold 11.8 million Class A shares, valuing the company at roughly $2.1 billion. Of the total offering, BitGo directly sold 11 million shares, while existing stockholders offloaded approximately 821,000 shares. The pricing signals robust institutional appetite for regulated crypto infrastructure, distinct from the volatility associated with consumer trading platforms.

The IPO lands in the shadow of the October 2025 crash… seeing BitGo command a premium is a vote of confidence from the community.

Goldman Sachs and Citigroup led the underwriting syndicate, granting them a 30-day option to purchase an additional 1.77 million shares. If exercised, this would inject another $31.9 million into the deal.

Institutional Pivot

BitGo’s successful pricing, the first major crypto listing of 2026, suggests investors are prioritizing "picks and shovels" plays over direct exposure to token prices. Unlike exchanges dependent on retail volume, BitGo generates revenue through custody fees, staking, and settlement for institutional clients.

The debut serves as a critical litmus test for other digital asset firms eyeing public markets this year, including Kraken and stablecoin issuer Circle.

Trading is scheduled to commence at 9:30 AM ET.

> ABOUT_THE_AUTHOR _

Amir Rocha

// Crypto News Reporter

I’m Amir Rocha, a reporter who believes you shouldn't need a computer science degree to understand the future of money. I spend my days translating technical developments from Zero-Knowledge rollups into clear, actionable insights for SEC filings. After 8 years in the blockchain space, I’ve learned that the most important story isn't the price, but the technology underneath. I write to help you spot the difference between genuine innovation and a marketing gimmick

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