
Crypto application developer Consensys has delayed its potential US IPO to at the earliest the fall of 2026 due to unfavorable market conditions. According to three people familiar with the matter, Consensys originally planned to file a draft S-1 with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) at the end of February, which is the first formal step in the IPO process, and has already hired JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs to serve as lead investment banks.
According to reports, the following factors stacked up to cause a sharp drop in the crypto market in February 2026, directly triggering Consensys to postpone its S-1 draft submission:
Macroeconomic uncertainty: Global economic outlook expectations turned bearish, suppressing risk-asset sentiment
Tariff concerns: Uncertainty around trade policy intensified market volatility
Slower rate-cut expectations: The timing of FED rate cuts was pushed back, causing capital flows to readjust
Massive outflows from Bitcoin ETFs: ETF outflows triggered a chain reaction of liquidations of leveraged positions in digital assets
BitGo (code: BTGO) is the only crypto-native company to complete an IPO in 2026. Its market performance provides a direct market reference for subsequent IPO plans:
IPO timing: January 2026
Fundraising amount: Approximately $213 million
Offering price: $18 per share (above the previously disclosed price range)
Listing exchange: New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)
First-day gain: More than 20%
Current share price: About 36% lower than the IPO pricing
The confirmed original IPO roadmap: Consensys planned to privately submit a draft S-1 to the SEC at the end of February 2026, with confidential submission being the first formal step in the IPO process. The company has hired JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs as lead investment banks, with the hiring completed last year.
Company background: Consensys completed a Series D financing in early 2022, raising $450 million at a valuation of $7 billion. The company’s products include the MetaMask wallet, as well as Ethereum development tools and infrastructure.
The original plan was to submit a confidential S-1 draft to the SEC at the end of February 2026, which is the first formal step in the IPO process. Delaying it means this submission step will be pushed back to the fall of 2026 or later. Consensys’ spokesperson did not confirm a new target timing and only said that “at the earliest, fall” is the new target window.
According to reports, the main headwinds for the February 2026 market include: macroeconomic uncertainty, tariff concerns, a shift in timing for FED rate-cut expectations, and leveraged liquidations triggered by massive outflows from Bitcoin ETFs. Companies such as Kraken and Ledger have paused their listing plans in this environment, contrasting with the IPO hype for crypto companies that originally emerged after improvements in US regulation.
Consensys’s most recent valuation publicly disclosed was $7 billion after its 2022 Series D financing (funding of $450 million). The company has not disclosed its latest valuation. Consensys’ spokesperson said it would not comment on market speculation, and that the new valuation baseline would have to wait until the IPO pricing process is confirmed.
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