Crypto mergers and acquisitions reached a record $8.6 billion in 2025, marking the most active year on record for dealmaking in the digital asset industry, according to a report by the Financial Times.
The surge in deal value reflects growing confidence among both crypto-native firms and traditional financial institutions, fueled by a more favorable regulatory environment in the United States under President Donald Trump.
Deal Count and Value Soar in 2025
According to the Financial Times, 267 crypto-related deals were completed in 2025 up to this week — an 18% increase compared to 2024. More notably, total deal value jumped nearly 300% year over year, rising from $2.17 billion in 2024 to $8.6 billion in 2025.
Industry participants expect the momentum to carry into 2026 as regulatory clarity improves across major jurisdictions, including the U.S., UK, and European Union.
Coinbase–Deribit Deal Leads Record-Breaking Year
The largest transaction of the year was Coinbase’s $2.9 billion acquisition of Deribit, the biggest acquisition ever recorded in the crypto sector.
The deal underscores Coinbase’s push to expand into crypto derivatives and institutional trading infrastructure, particularly as options volumes continue to grow globally.
Other major transactions in 2025 included:
Kraken acquiring futures trading platform NinjaTrader for $1.5 billion
Ripple purchasing prime brokerage Hidden Road for $1.25 billion
These deals highlight strong demand for regulated trading platforms, derivatives infrastructure, and licensed financial entities.
Crypto-Friendly U.S. Policy Boosts Deal Confidence
Analysts cited the Trump administration’s crypto-friendly stance as a key catalyst behind the M&A boom. The rollback of regulatory lawsuits and broader deregulation efforts have encouraged traditional financial institutions to enter the crypto space through acquisitions rather than building in-house capabilities.
The shift has made crypto firms with licenses, compliance frameworks, and established infrastructure particularly attractive targets.
Crypto IPO Activity Also Explodes
In addition to M&A growth, crypto initial public offerings (IPOs) surged in 2025. The Financial Times reported that $14.6 billion was raised globally across 11 crypto IPOs, compared with just $310 million from four IPOs in 2024.
Notable public listings included:
Bullish (parent company of CoinDesk), raising $1.1 billion
Circle Internet Group, issuer of USDC, raising over $1 billion
Gemini, raising $425 million
Regulatory Compliance Drives Acquisition Strategy
Legal experts say regulatory compliance is becoming a central driver of crypto M&A activity.
Diego Ballon Ossio, partner at law firm Clifford Chance, told the Financial Times that firms are actively acquiring companies for their regulatory licenses, particularly those aligned with the EU’s MiCA framework.
Similarly, Charles Kerrigan, partner at CMS, said companies are willing to spend heavily to remain compliant under emerging U.S. and UK crypto regulations — often opting for acquisitions over lengthy licensing processes.
Deal Boom Continues Despite Market Pullback
The record year for crypto dealmaking comes even as the broader market cooled in the second half of 2025.
Bitcoin has fallen more than 30% from its October high above $126,000, recently trading just below $88,000. Despite the price decline, institutional appetite for long-term crypto infrastructure appears undiminished.
Outlook: M&A Momentum Likely to Extend Into 2026
With clearer regulatory frameworks taking shape and traditional finance increasingly engaging with digital assets, analysts expect crypto mergers, acquisitions, and IPO activity to remain elevated in 2026.
The data suggests that institutional commitment to crypto is shifting from speculation toward permanent market integration, even amid short-term price volatility.


