Anchorage Digital's latest funding round is quite substantial—raising between $200 million and $400 million, with plans to ring the bell in 2027. But even more noteworthy than going public is its self-issued stablecoin USAT, developed under the GENIUS Act framework.
This institution is a bit unique. As the only federally licensed crypto bank in the US (approved in 2021), Anchorage has never aimed to compete for retail customers like Coinbase. Its positioning is very clear—building institutional-grade infrastructure. With a valuation already at $3 billion in 2021, if this funding round goes smoothly, its valuation will undoubtedly climb even higher.
The real key game here is the stablecoin sector. Anchorage has announced a partnership with Tether and plans to double its stablecoin team size by 2026. Banks and crypto companies are now competing for stablecoin issuance rights, and with its federal banking license, Anchorage is naturally positioned at the top of the regulatory food chain.
Looking at its competitors around it makes this clear: BitGo has filed an S-1, valued at $1.9 billion; Kraken plans to go public in early 2026; Circle and Gemini have already entered the public market. By 2027, a wave of crypto company IPOs may arrive, and those who can secure stablecoin issuance rights will essentially determine who can truly break out.
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EthMaximalist
· 22h ago
The federal license is indeed a strong trump card, but with the fierce battle over stablecoins, whoever obtains the issuance rights will truly benefit.
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SchrodingerWallet
· 22h ago
Federal license + stablecoin issuance rights, this combination is a bit outrageous... feels like Anchorage will take off in the 2027 IPO wave.
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BlindBoxVictim
· 22h ago
Anchorage's move is indeed aggressive, with a federal license as a foundation plus stablecoins... They're aiming to dominate the institutional market.
Anchorage Digital's latest funding round is quite substantial—raising between $200 million and $400 million, with plans to ring the bell in 2027. But even more noteworthy than going public is its self-issued stablecoin USAT, developed under the GENIUS Act framework.
This institution is a bit unique. As the only federally licensed crypto bank in the US (approved in 2021), Anchorage has never aimed to compete for retail customers like Coinbase. Its positioning is very clear—building institutional-grade infrastructure. With a valuation already at $3 billion in 2021, if this funding round goes smoothly, its valuation will undoubtedly climb even higher.
The real key game here is the stablecoin sector. Anchorage has announced a partnership with Tether and plans to double its stablecoin team size by 2026. Banks and crypto companies are now competing for stablecoin issuance rights, and with its federal banking license, Anchorage is naturally positioned at the top of the regulatory food chain.
Looking at its competitors around it makes this clear: BitGo has filed an S-1, valued at $1.9 billion; Kraken plans to go public in early 2026; Circle and Gemini have already entered the public market. By 2027, a wave of crypto company IPOs may arrive, and those who can secure stablecoin issuance rights will essentially determine who can truly break out.