Bullish has agreed to acquire Equiniti in a $4.2 billion transaction, a deal that could test whether blockchain-based systems can integrate with the core recordkeeping infrastructure of global equity markets.
The acquisition, expected to close in January 2027, subject to regulatory approvals, would place a crypto-focused market operator in control of shareholder registries for nearly 3,000 public companies. Equiniti maintains official ownership records for issuers including Berkshire Hathaway, Moody’s, and Rolls-Royce Holdings, highlighting the scale and sensitivity of the infrastructure involved.
Equiniti processes roughly $500 billion in annual payments across dividends, corporate actions, and other shareholder services, underscoring its role as a critical financial utility rather than a niche service provider.
Equiniti has entered into a definitive agreement to be acquired by @Bullish. Together, we’re advancing institutional tokenized markets, combining trusted transfer agency expertise with blockchain innovation.
Learn more ➡️ https://t.co/zYl88PRr2B#CapitalMarkets #Tokenization… pic.twitter.com/3PiW8zOxdg
— Equiniti (@Equiniti) May 5, 2026
Deal Structure and Financials
The transaction includes approximately $1.85 billion in assumed debt and about $2.35 billion in Bullish stock, with the equity component priced at $38.48 per share based on a 30-day volume-weighted average price (VWAP) as of May 4, 2026. Based on disclosed projections, the combined company could generate roughly $1.3 billion in adjusted revenue in 2026, with more than $500 million in EBITDA before capital expenditures.
Bullish has also outlined medium-term expectations of approximately 6–8% revenue growth from 2027 through 2029, with tokenization-related services projected to contribute around 20% of incremental growth over that period, reflecting a measured but targeted expansion strategy.
Private equity firm Siris, which acquired Equiniti in 2021, will retain board representation following the deal. The structure suggests a partial exit rather than a full divestment, allowing Siris to remain exposed to any upside tied to tokenization efforts.
In addition, Siris is expected to retain certain strategic rights, including optionality around non-core business units, a structure that further signals continued conviction in the long-term value of modernizing transfer agent infrastructure.
While Bullish has outlined growth expectations tied partly to blockchain services, such projections remain contingent on regulatory clarity and institutional uptake, both of which have historically progressed unevenly in digital asset markets.
Why Equiniti Matters
Equiniti is not a trading platform but a transfer agent, a regulated entity responsible for maintaining the official ledger of shareholders. This role is central to capital markets, ensuring that ownership records are accurate and that dividends, voting rights, and corporate actions are properly administered.
Because transfer agents serve as the book of record, they effectively act as the legal backbone of public markets. Any company listed on an exchange ultimately relies on a regulated transfer agent to validate ownership, making this function a critical but often overlooked bottleneck in efforts to modernize financial infrastructure.
As a result, any attempt to tokenize securities at scale must either replicate or integrate with these systems. That makes Equiniti a strategically significant asset for any firm seeking to modernize financial infrastructure, not just as a service provider, but as a gatekeeper to the existing system.
Bullish’s move suggests a shift away from purely trading-focused crypto models toward deeper integration with traditional financial plumbing. Company leadership has framed this shift around a “three pillars” approach to institutional tokenization: end-to-end services, a unified ledger system, and scale in issuer relationships, capabilities that are difficult to assemble organically.
Tokenization Ambitions and Constraints
At the core of the deal is the idea of tokenizing equities and other securities, representing them on blockchain networks to enable faster settlement, continuous trading, and programmable financial flows such as automated dividend payments.
In theory, such systems could reduce settlement times from days to near-instant execution and expand market access beyond traditional trading hours. This could also enable near real-time visibility into shareholder ownership (“cap table” transparency) for issuers, reducing informational lag and improving the efficiency of corporate actions.
However, these benefits depend heavily on regulatory acceptance and interoperability with existing clearing and custody systems. Recent Web3 fundraining updates also show that institutional capital is increasingly backing companies focused on tokenization infrastructure, compliance, and settlement technology rather than consumer-facing crypto products.
Institutions like DTCC, Euroclear, and Clearstream still anchor global settlement infrastructure. Any large-scale shift toward tokenized securities would likely require coordination with, or adaptation by, these entities rather than outright displacement, a point emphasized in company disclosures, which frame tokenization as an integration layer rather than a replacement of existing systems.
Market Context
The acquisition comes at a time when tokenization is gaining renewed attention among financial institutions. Stablecoins, often described as tokenized fiat currency, have reached hundreds of billions of dollars in market capitalization and are increasingly used in cross-border payments.
Regulatory initiatives, including Europe’s pilot frameworks for distributed ledger-based market infrastructure, are also exploring how blockchain systems might coexist with traditional finance.
Still, previous attempts to introduce tokenized equities have faced hurdles, including limited liquidity, fragmented regulation, and concerns over investor protection.
The deal also reflects a broader consolidation trend across 2025–2026, where digital asset firms have increasingly acquired regulated financial infrastructure providers rather than building capabilities from scratch, accelerating their path into institutional markets.
A Structural Bet
Bullish’s acquisition of Equiniti reflects a broader shift in strategy across parts of the digital asset sector, from speculative trading toward infrastructure ownership. As Ironlight Group builds infrastructure for tokenized securities, the broader market is increasingly recognizing that institutional adoption depends as much on regulated infrastructure as on blockchain technology itself. By acquiring a regulated entity embedded in existing market systems, Bullish is positioning itself closer to the operational core of capital markets.
The deal also creates a vertically integrated stack spanning market data, liquidity, and official ownership records, with Equiniti expected to operate as an independent pillar alongside Bullish’s exchange operations and its media and data arm, CoinDesk. Equiniti’s existing leadership team, including CEO Dan Kramer, is expected to remain in place, preserving regulatory continuity and client relationships.
This positioning differentiates Bullish from crypto-native exchanges that primarily serve end investors, instead placing it closer to issuers and the foundational infrastructure of capital markets.
Whether that position translates into meaningful adoption of tokenized securities will depend less on technology and more on regulation, market trust, and institutional behavior, factors that have historically moved more slowly than innovation cycles in crypto.








