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Clear Street, a New York broker and financial services group that advised on a number of crypto treasury deals earlier this year, plans to go public as soon as next month, according to people familiar with the matter.
The listing could value the company at $10bn-$12bn, two of the people said. Goldman Sachs was expected to lead the deal, which was unlikely to come before January, one of the people added.
Clear Street and Goldman declined to comment.
Founded in 2018, Clear Street has emerged as one of the big beneficiaries of the “crypto treasury” craze that has swept through global stock markets this year, as dozens of companies have sought to cash in on rising digital asset prices by buying and holding vast quantities of bitcoin and other tokens.
The fad was inspired by the success of Michael Saylor’s Strategy, a software enterprise group that since 2020 has raised billions of dollars in debt and equity to fund its purchase of 650,000 bitcoin.
Clear Street has established itself as one of the most prominent underwriters of crypto-related stock offerings, including for Strategy.
It also acted as underwriter for Trump Media & Technology Group, the Trump family’s media group. TMTG earlier this year said it planned to raise billions of dollars to set up a bitcoin treasury vehicle of its own.
Clear Street has underwritten about $91bn in equity, debt and M&A transactions this year, according to its website, including deals for crypto evangelist Anthony Pompliano and Vivek Ramaswamy, the former Republican presidential candidate.
The crypto treasury model has come under strain over the past few months as digital asset prices have tumbled from record highs. Strategy’s shares have fallen 60 per cent over the past six months. Bitcoin has shed 30 per cent of its value since early October.
Many of Strategy’s smaller imitators trade at a discount to the tokens on their balance sheet, constraining their ability to raise fresh capital to fund further token purchases.
Clear Street’s initial public offering is set to come after a middling year for the US listings market. The 316 Wall Street IPOs since January have raised about $63bn, the highest figure since 2021, Dealogic data shows.
Many of the biggest companies have struggled after listing, however. Design software maker Figma surged on its market debut in July, when it was valued at about $60bn. Its shares have since fallen almost 70 per cent.









