BitGo Holdings, Inc. spent more than a decade standing between digital assets and disaster, and on Jan 12, 2026, the Palo Alto based firm stepped onto a louder stage with the launch of its IPO. Released at 9:00 AM ET via BusinessWire, the announcement was tight, regulated, and unmistakably institutional. A Form S-1 is on file, trading is planned for the NYSE under ticker BTGO, and Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC is leading a syndicate stacked with Citi, Deutsche Bank, Wells Fargo, and others who do not show up for experiments.
This moment did not appear overnight. BitGo was founded in 2011 by Mike Belshe, the former Google engineer who helped create SPDY and author HTTP/2.0, with Ben Davenport and Will O’Brien joining in the early years to shape the product and company. From launching the first commercial multi-signature Bitcoin wallet in 2014 to establishing BitGo Trust Company in South Dakota in 2018, the firm chose custody, compliance, and security when the industry was still chasing volume and headlines.
The offering covers 11,821,595 shares of Class A common stock priced between $15 and $17, pointing to a midpoint valuation near $1.96B and up to $187M in primary proceeds. Mike Belshe will retain control through a dual-class structure with 15:1 voting power via Class B shares, qualifying BitGo as a controlled company under NYSE rules. The capital is earmarked for technology development, acquisitions, and competitive positioning in a custody market projected to reach $53.4B by 2030.
BitGo’s scale already reads institutional. More than 4,600 clients across 100+ countries. Over 1.1M user accounts. Assets under custody growing from $30.8B in 2024 to more than $100B by late 2025, processing roughly 8% of all Bitcoin transaction value. The platform spans regulated cold storage, multi-sig and TSS wallets supporting 1,400+ tokens, prime trading and financing, staking, and settlement. This is not consumer flash. It is plumbing, built to hold weight.
Financial momentum comes with tension. Revenue jumped from $1.12B in H1 2024 to $4.19B in H1 2025, a 274% YoY surge, while net income margins compressed as the company scaled globally and prepared for public scrutiny. Add a German BaFin license, custody for FTX creditors, and partnerships ranging from healthcare donations to corporate treasury, and the signal sharpens. This IPO is less about crypto hype and more about whether Wall Street is ready to price infrastructure that already runs.

