The parent company of the New York Stock Exchange strategically invests in OKX: The intentions behind the $25 billion valuation
Author: Gu Yu, ChainCatcher
On the evening of March 5, OKX announced a strategic investment from the Intercontinental Exchange (ICE), the parent company of the New York Stock Exchange, at a valuation of $25 billion, making OKX another cryptocurrency exchange endorsed by traditional financial giants.
In the previous year, similar cases emerged continuously: Binance received a $2 billion investment from Abu Dhabi's technology investment firm MGX, market maker Citadel Securities invested $200 million in Kraken, Japan's financial group SBI Holdings announced the acquisition of Singapore's cryptocurrency exchange Coinhako, and South Korea's largest portal operator Naver acquired the cryptocurrency exchange Upbit...
These continuous cases indicate that cryptocurrency exchanges are becoming a battleground for traditional finance and tech giants, as well as an important foothold in the strategic landscape of Web3. Cryptocurrency exchanges themselves are also increasingly aligning with traditional capital markets. Over the past year, Gemini, Hashkey Group, and Bullish have successively gone public on mainstream stock exchanges, and OKX has also been reported to be formulating an IPO strategy.
In this context, OKX accepting the olive branch extended by ICE seems quite natural.
According to reports, ICE's investment in OKX is valued at $25 billion, which is equivalent to half of Coinbase's current market value. After the news was released, the price of OKX's platform token OKB surged by as much as 59% to $124 in a short period, with a fully diluted market capitalization reaching $26 billion. However, it is important to note that ICE is investing in the equity of OKX's parent company, which is not directly related to OKB, and the price of OKB has since fallen back to around $98.
Although the specific amount of this investment has not been disclosed, the fact that ICE obtained a board seat indicates that this investment gives ICE at least a 5% stake in OKX, which means at least a $1.25 billion investment. For reference, in last year's investment in Polymarket, ICE invested $2 billion at a valuation of $9 billion, demonstrating the scale of their investment.
Currently, ICE's total market capitalization is $93 billion, with total revenue of $9.9 billion over 25 years and total profits of $3.3 billion. The significant investments in OKX and Polymarket are not small amounts for ICE, reflecting ICE's strong determination to advance its Web3 strategy.
From a strategic perspective, this investment is symbolically significant for both giants in different fields. According to the announcement, OKX will provide real-time price information for cryptocurrencies that can be traded on the ICE exchange, and there is potential for direct trading flow in the future, which will significantly benefit OKX in expanding its user base.
At the same time, OKX has long been mired in compliance dilemmas, with the label of a Chinese offshore exchange lingering. Although it has successively obtained licenses such as the EU MiCA crypto asset service license and the Singapore payment institution license, due to historical issues, OKX admitted in February 2025 that it had provided trading services in the U.S. without permission and was fined $504 million by U.S. regulators.
Because of this, OKX has been particularly cautious in its approach to compliance over the past few years. Taking the recent rise of tokenized stocks as an example, OKX's entry time into mainstream exchanges has been noticeably late, only announcing the launch of stock perpetual contract products in certain countries and regions in February of this year. In many markets where regulations are unclear, users still cannot find relevant stock derivatives on the OKX platform.
Through the investment cooperation with ICE, OKX will be able to significantly reshape its image in traditional financial markets and regulatory bodies, especially in the European and American markets. "For OKX, this cooperation marks a new chapter in our entry into the U.S. market," said OKX founder Xu Mingxing.
On another level of cooperation, OKX will allow users to trade tokenized stocks and derivatives listed on the New York Stock Exchange, with this feature expected to launch in the second half of 2026. This will enable NYSE products to be traded not only by U.S. investors but also directly by global investors through OKX.
"We believe that the field of tokenized securities and the digital representation of traditional assets holds enormous potential. In the future, issuers may be able to push securities directly to global investors through modern digital infrastructure while benefiting from the governance, market structure, and regulatory framework that traditional exchanges have relied on for a long time," Xu Mingxing stated. "Collaborating with the Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) and the broader New York Stock Exchange ecosystem provides us with a unique opportunity to explore how these models can evolve responsibly."
In fact, the wave of tokenized securities is rapidly sweeping across the financial market. From U.S. Treasury bonds to private equity, and from stocks to ETFs, an increasing number of traditional assets are being attempted for digital issuance and trading through blockchain technology.
For exchanges, this not only means new trading categories but may also reshape the liquidity structure of capital markets—asset issuance, clearing, and trading will no longer be limited to a specific country or trading period but will enter a new era of 24/7 global liquidity sharing.
In the past few years, the crypto industry has oscillated between "challenging traditional finance" and "being absorbed by traditional finance." From Coinbase's IPO to traditional market makers and exchange giants investing in crypto platforms, and now ICE's investment in OKX, more and more signs indicate that the relationship between the two is shifting from opposition to integration.
In this process, cryptocurrency exchanges are no longer just the center of speculative markets but are gradually becoming a new type of financial infrastructure connecting global capital and digital assets.
You may also like

Raydium Old Liquidity Pool Reportedly Exploited, With $1.34 Million Moved to Ethereum and Tornado Cash
An old Raydium liquidity pool was reportedly exploited for around $1.34 million in USDC, RAY, and wSOL, with the stolen funds bridged to Ethereum and deposited into Tornado Cash. The incident highlights the tail risks of legacy DeFi pools, old contracts, and cross-chain fund laundering paths.

Kalshi Executive Challenges “SBF Backed AI Unicorns” Narrative, Says Leopold Aschenbrenner Was Key Figure
Kalshi executive John Wang questioned the “SBF backed AI unicorns” narrative, saying Leopold Aschenbrenner was the key figure behind major AI investment decisions.

Pantera Capital Partner: How Tokenization is Restructuring the Private Equity and Early Investment Ecosystem?

New York Proposes Stricter Stablecoin Issuer Rules Aligned With Federal GENIUS Act
NYDFS proposed stricter stablecoin issuer rules aligned with the GENIUS Act, covering reserves, custody, redemption timelines, audits, and capital buffers.

Every exchange is a "Universal Exchange."

The counterattack of traditional finance: Alliance chains are quietly reviving

CryptoQuant Says Bitcoin Profitable Supply Is Near 45% Pressure Zone as On-Chain Data Points to Market Repricing
CryptoQuant said Bitcoin’s profitable supply is nearing the 45% pressure zone, signaling rising market stress, unrealized losses, and a possible on-chain repricing phase.

Bitcoin Falls Below 200-Week Moving Average as On-Chain Data Shows Over Half of Supply in Loss
Bitcoin dropped below its 200-week moving average as on-chain data showed over 50% of circulating supply is now in loss, signaling rising market stress.

CFTC Reportedly Plans New Prediction Market Rules Focused on Manipulation Risk and Public Interest Review
The CFTC is reportedly preparing new prediction market rules focused on manipulation risk, public interest review, and retail trader protections.

Meet the new WEEX trial fund—your gateway to greater profits

WEEX Labs Lands at Dutch Blockchain Week: A Disruptive Crypto × AI Conversation Sets Sail in Amsterdam

SK Hynix Reportedly Plans U.S. ADR Listing as Early as August, With SEC Approval Possible in Late June
SK Hynix may pursue a U.S. ADR listing as early as August, with SEC approval reportedly possible in late June amid strong AI chip supply chain demand.

SpaceX vs Tesla vs xAI: Which Elon Musk Trade Has the Biggest Upside in 2026?

OpenAI Reveals It Has Confidentially Submitted an S-1 to the SEC, Keeping the Door Open for a Future IPO
On June 9, according to an OpenAI announcement, the company recently confidentially submitted a draft S-1 registration statement to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), beginning the preliminary compliance process for a potential initial public offering. OpenAI said it chose to disclose this proactively because it expected the news might leak; however, the company has not yet set a specific listing timeline, and related arrangements may still take some time.

Latest research from 13 top universities including Cornell University: The current state, challenges, and misconceptions of the fusion of Crypto and AI

Deconstructing Anthropic: The Best AI Company, Possibly Also a Type of Organizational Invention

Apollo and Blackstone Reportedly Back $35 Billion Anthropic Chip Financing as Deal Details Remain Unclear
On June 9, according to currently available news alerts, Apollo and Blackstone Group participated in a $35 billion financing for an Anthropic “chip project.” Based on the original wording of the report, the funding has already been raised, but public information remains limited. The financing structure, use of proceeds, project entity, and whether Apollo and Blackstone participated through equity, debt, or project financing have not yet been disclosed.

Humanity Protocol Security Incident Escalates: More Than $31 Million Stolen From Related Addresses as Attacker Continues Selling H for ETH
On June 9, according to monitoring by Onchain Lens, more than $31 million has been stolen from addresses linked to Humanity Protocol, and the attack is still ongoing, with the hacker continuously swapping H tokens for ETH. Project founder Terence Kwok later confirmed the security incident on X, saying the issue involved a private key leak.
Raydium Old Liquidity Pool Reportedly Exploited, With $1.34 Million Moved to Ethereum and Tornado Cash
An old Raydium liquidity pool was reportedly exploited for around $1.34 million in USDC, RAY, and wSOL, with the stolen funds bridged to Ethereum and deposited into Tornado Cash. The incident highlights the tail risks of legacy DeFi pools, old contracts, and cross-chain fund laundering paths.
Kalshi Executive Challenges “SBF Backed AI Unicorns” Narrative, Says Leopold Aschenbrenner Was Key Figure
Kalshi executive John Wang questioned the “SBF backed AI unicorns” narrative, saying Leopold Aschenbrenner was the key figure behind major AI investment decisions.
Pantera Capital Partner: How Tokenization is Restructuring the Private Equity and Early Investment Ecosystem?
New York Proposes Stricter Stablecoin Issuer Rules Aligned With Federal GENIUS Act
NYDFS proposed stricter stablecoin issuer rules aligned with the GENIUS Act, covering reserves, custody, redemption timelines, audits, and capital buffers.
