BitGo's CEO predicts that tokenized equities will disrupt traditional IPOs by creating an open, innovative ecosystem. This technology allows issuers to form a direct, programmable relationship with shareholders, bypassing intermediaries to offer unique incentives and foster deeper engagement.
The traditional IPO exit is being replaced by a perpetual secondary market for elite private companies. This new paradigm provides liquidity for investors and employees without the high costs and regulatory burdens of going public. This shift fundamentally alters the venture capital lifecycle, enabling longer private holding periods.
For highly-capitalized companies like SpaceX and OpenAI, bankers are designing new IPO structures. Instead of standard 90-180 day lockup periods, they're planning staggered share releases over a longer timeframe to manage immense selling pressure from a large base of private shareholders and prevent post-IPO stock volatility.
While tokenizing private stock could create liquidity for early investors, Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong emphasizes the need for company permission. This prevents premature liquidation that could undermine vesting schedules and other crucial employee retention incentives before an IPO.
The key to tokenization is combining two worlds: traditional finance's expertise in legally custodying assets, and crypto's native, free infrastructure for 24/7 trading and liquidity. This fusion makes it possible to make previously untradable assets like private equity, art, or collectibles instantly liquid and accessible.
BitGo's public offering was a strategic move to build transparency and trust, making it easier for large, traditional financial institutions to perform due diligence. This positions BitGo to capture a total addressable market that recently doubled due to favorable regulatory changes.
Venture capitalist Bruce Booth explains that bankers, lawyers, audit firms, and VCs all have strong financial incentives for a company to go public. This creates systemic pressure that may not align with the company's best long-term interests.
AI and crypto are not competing but are parallel, complementary forces reshaping business. While AI revolutionizes company creation and internal operations, Internet Capital Markets (powered by crypto) are fundamentally rewriting the external functions of capital formation, trading, settlement, and ownership for this new generation of AI-native companies.
Polymarket's major backing from the NYSE's parent company validates the trend of turning all information and events into liquid, tokenized markets. This "financialization of everything" will disrupt established industries, from sports betting to traditional finance, by offering more efficient, decentralized alternatives.
The next evolution in fintech will be regulated applications that offer seamless trading across traditional securities, tokenized assets, and native crypto. This framework allows direct user access to DeFi protocols like staking and lending from a single, compliant, and user-friendly platform, bridging the gap between two currently separate financial worlds.
Multicoin's central thesis is that crypto's ultimate purpose is creating "Internet Capital Markets"—the ability to trade any asset, from anywhere, 24/7, via any software. This broad vision of permissionless, programmable finance is seen as the most significant long-term impact of blockchain, destined to supersede more niche consumer applications or "Web3" concepts.