Kraken’s parent Payward will acquire derivatives exchange Bitnomial for $550 million in cash and stock.

Crypto exchange Kraken’s parent company has agreed to acquire digital asset derivatives platform Bitnomial for up to $550 million in a cash-and-stock transaction that values ​​the company at $20 billion, Payward said in a press release shared exclusively with CoinDesk.

Founded more than a decade ago, Bitnomial is the first crypto-native platform to secure all three licenses required to operate a full-stack derivatives business domestically. It has approvals to operate a designated contract market, a derivatives clearing organization and a futures commission dealer. The acquisition effectively cuts short years of regulatory build-up for Payward as it expands its US footprint.

“The shape of a market is determined by its clearing infrastructure, not its front end,” said Paywards co-CEO Arjun Sethi, pointing to Bitnomial’s crypto-native settlement, collateral and 24/7 trading capabilities as core to the strategy.

Deal activity in the crypto sector has begun to pick up after a prolonged slump as firms look to consolidate capabilities and strengthen infrastructure after years of market volatility and regulatory scrutiny.

Larger, better capitalized players are increasingly targeting acquisitions that fill strategic gaps such as custody, derivatives or compliance, rather than pursuing growth at any cost. At the same time, depressed valuations have created opportunities for buyers, while smaller startups facing funding constraints are more open to being acquired, setting the stage for a more pragmatic phase of industry consolidation.

Scaling up

Kraken has scaled up ahead of its planned initial public offering (IPO). Payward said it confidentially filed a draft S-1 with the US Securities and Exchange Commission on November 19 last year.

However, CoinDesk reported last month that the firm had put its IPO plans on hold due to difficult market conditions. According to sources, the company is still considering an initial public offering, but probably not until market conditions improve.

In recent years, Kraken has pursued a relatively targeted but increasingly strategic M&A strategy focused on expanding beyond pure crypto trading into multi-asset and derivatives infrastructure.

The most significant transaction was its $1.5 billion purchase of NinjaTrader in 2025, a US-based retail futures platform and CFTC-registered FCM, marking the largest trade to date between traditional finance and crypto and giving Kraken a direct foothold in US derivatives markets and a large base of futures traders.

Prior to that, Kraken made smaller tuck-in acquisitions such as BCM in 2023 and other platform or exchange acquisitions, including the later acquisition of Small Exchange, with the aim of building its derivatives and institutional capabilities.

Overall, Kraken’s deal activity signals a clear strategy. Using M&A to acquire regulatory licenses, trading infrastructure and user bases that help it evolve into a broader, institutional-grade, multi-asset trading platform spanning crypto and traditional markets.

Derivative business

The combined platform will integrate Bitnomial’s regulated infrastructure with Payward’s global distribution and liquidity across brands including Kraken and NinjaTrader. Initial offerings are expected to include spot margin, perpetual futures and options for US clients under Commodity Futures Trading Commission oversight.

Payward has built its derivatives business globally, acquiring a UK crypto futures platform in 2019 and launching an EU offering in 2025. With Bitnomial, it now adds a fully regulated US stack.

The deal also expands Payward Services, the firm’s B2B infrastructure arm, giving banks, fintechs and brokerages access to regulated US derivatives through a single API integration.

The transaction, which covers 100% of Bitnomial’s equity, is expected to close in the first half of 2026, pending customary conditions and regulatory filings.

Read more: Crypto exchange Kraken was targeted by extortion attempts, but says there was no breach and no client funds at risk

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