April 22, 2025
11 11 11 AM
Latest Post
Matter Labs, ZKsync Developer, Sued for Alleged Intellectual Property Theft Crypto Ally Paul Atkins Sworn In to Replace Gary Gensler Atop U.S. SEC MoonPay’s Ivan Soto-Wright Bets on a Non-Custodial, API-First Future for Crypto Interoperability Project Analog Raises $15M to Unify Liquidity Across Blockchains Bitcoin Rises to $90K for the First Time Since Early March CoinDesk 20 Performance Update: SUI and POL Rise 7.5%, Leading Index Higher DAO Infrastructure Provider Tally Raises $8M to Scale On-Chain Governance Dutch Bank ING Said to Be Working on a New Stablecoin With Other TradFi and Crypto Firms How Some Bitcoin Mining Firms Try to Game U.S. Customs Controls Ripple’s RLUSD Stablecoin Goes Live on Aave V3 Ethereum Market

Bithumb to Split in Two as Crypto Exchange Inches Toward South Korean IPO

Bithumb plans to split its core crypto exchange business from other activities as it reorganizes in preparation for an initial public offering (IPO).

The Seoul-based company will split in two, with Bithumb Korea focusing solely on operating the core crypto exchange business. Bithumb Korea will be the entity seeking a public listing, local media reported, citing the country’s corporate registry.

The other unit, a newly created company called Bithumb A, will oversee venture investments, asset management and new business initiatives. The restructuring is set to take effect on July 31.

Bithumb A will consolidate the exchange’s investment arms, including Bithumb Partners, which has shifted from NFT and metaverse projects to financial product investments such as equities, bonds and convertible bonds. According to local media, Bithumb is in talks with licensed entities to offer these services in the country.

Bithumb Investment, which manages equity stakes and strategic partnerships with external companies, will also fall under Bithumb A’s oversight.

Last year Bithumb was said to be considering a NASDAQ listing, but now its plans have shifted to a listing on South Korea’s Kosdaq first, with a U.S. listing as a secondary objective.

Bithumb posted an operating profit of 130.8 billion won ($95 million) in 2024, reversing a 149 billion-won loss from the previous year, local media reported.

This post was originally published on this site