
The licensed exchange seeks fresh capital to expand technology, risk controls and global reach in a major test of investor confidence
HashKey Holdings, Hong Kong’s largest licensed cryptocurrency exchange, has filed to raise as much as two hundred fifteen million dollars through an initial public offering on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange.
The deal, one of the most significant digital-asset listings ever attempted in the city, underscores Hong Kong’s ambition to position itself as a regulated hub for global crypto finance.
The exchange plans to issue more than two hundred forty million shares at a proposed price range between five dollars ninety-five cents and six dollars ninety-five cents in Hong Kong currency.
If fully subscribed, the offering would value HashKey at around nineteen billion Hong Kong dollars.
Trading could begin as early as mid-December, following approval from the exchange’s listing committee.
Founded in twenty eighteen, HashKey has developed a broad ecosystem across trading, asset management and venture investment.
It was among the first firms to secure licences under Hong Kong’s revamped virtual-asset regulatory regime and has processed more than one point three trillion Hong Kong dollars in cumulative spot-trading volume.
Yet the exchange remains unprofitable, reporting losses exceeding five hundred million Hong Kong dollars in the first half of this year — a reflection of heavy investment in compliance, infrastructure and rapid expansion.
According to its filing, HashKey intends to use proceeds from the IPO to strengthen its technology platforms, reinforce risk-management frameworks, broaden its product offerings and support global expansion plans.
The company is betting that regulated exchanges will attract both institutional and retail users seeking trustworthy digital-asset services as the industry matures.
Market analysts say the outcome of the listing will serve as a barometer for the strength of investor appetite in Asia’s regulated crypto sector.
A successful debut would bolster Hong Kong’s efforts to revive its role as a digital-finance centre, while a weak response could amplify doubts about the long-term profitability of publicly listed crypto exchanges.
The deal, one of the most significant digital-asset listings ever attempted in the city, underscores Hong Kong’s ambition to position itself as a regulated hub for global crypto finance.
The exchange plans to issue more than two hundred forty million shares at a proposed price range between five dollars ninety-five cents and six dollars ninety-five cents in Hong Kong currency.
If fully subscribed, the offering would value HashKey at around nineteen billion Hong Kong dollars.
Trading could begin as early as mid-December, following approval from the exchange’s listing committee.
Founded in twenty eighteen, HashKey has developed a broad ecosystem across trading, asset management and venture investment.
It was among the first firms to secure licences under Hong Kong’s revamped virtual-asset regulatory regime and has processed more than one point three trillion Hong Kong dollars in cumulative spot-trading volume.
Yet the exchange remains unprofitable, reporting losses exceeding five hundred million Hong Kong dollars in the first half of this year — a reflection of heavy investment in compliance, infrastructure and rapid expansion.
According to its filing, HashKey intends to use proceeds from the IPO to strengthen its technology platforms, reinforce risk-management frameworks, broaden its product offerings and support global expansion plans.
The company is betting that regulated exchanges will attract both institutional and retail users seeking trustworthy digital-asset services as the industry matures.
Market analysts say the outcome of the listing will serve as a barometer for the strength of investor appetite in Asia’s regulated crypto sector.
A successful debut would bolster Hong Kong’s efforts to revive its role as a digital-finance centre, while a weak response could amplify doubts about the long-term profitability of publicly listed crypto exchanges.









































