Securitize has filed a public registration statement with the SEC as it advances plans to become a listed company through a merger with Cantor Fitzgerald–backed Cantor Equity Partners II (CEPT). In that filing the company said it earned $55.6 million in revenue for the first nine months of 2025, marking an 841% increase from the same period in 2024. Full‑year 2024 revenue was reported at $18.8 million, more than double the prior year.
Securitize's Explosive Revenue Growth
The company’s $55.6 million result covers the first nine months of 2025 and reflects rapid year‑over‑year growth, cited in its SEC filing as an 841% increase compared with 2024. For context, Securitize reported $18.8 million for the full year 2024, a figure the company says was more than twice the prior year’s revenue. These numbers form the financial backdrop to its decision to seek a public listing.
IPO Plans Through CEPT Merger
Securitize has submitted an SEC registration statement as part of a plan to go public via a merger with Cantor Equity Partners II (CEPT), which is backed by Cantor Fitzgerald. The merger agreement still requires both shareholder and regulatory approval before it can close. If the deal clears those approvals, Securitize would begin trading on Nasdaq under the SECZ ticker.
Tokenization Expansion in Traditional Finance
Securitize provides infrastructure to convert traditional assets—such as U.S. Treasuries, funds or equity—into blockchain tokens that can be issued, traded or managed on-chain. Major financial firms are increasingly adding tokenized assets to their offerings, and Securitize’s moves sit within that broader shift. For more on the company’s technology direction, see Securitize DeFi focus, and for background on tokenized instruments see tokenized shares explained.
A report by Boston Consulting Group and Ripple cited in coverage estimates the tokenization market could grow to $18.9 trillion by 2033, a projection often referenced in discussions about institutional adoption of tokenized assets. Securitize’s filing and revenue figures arrive as that market narrative gains attention across finance.
Why this matters
For a miner operating in Russia with between one and one thousand devices, Securitize’s IPO plans and revenue surge do not change the mechanics of mining or your daily operations. At the same time, the company’s move to list and the wider push into tokenized assets are indicators of growing institutional activity in tokenization, which can influence the broader crypto ecosystem and available financial products over time.
In practical terms, this means the immediate impact on power, hardware, and pool choice for miners is minimal, but the industry’s maturation can affect liquidity and how crypto‑related services evolve. Keep this development in mind as part of the market context rather than a direct operational factor.
What to do?
- Monitor official filings and news: follow Securitize’s SEC filings and merger updates to spot any market‑moving announcements that could affect exchanges or custody options.
- Keep records and diversify revenue paths: maintain clear accounting for mined coins and consider small allocations to different withdrawal or custody methods to manage risk.
- Watch service availability: if tokenized financial products expand, review custodial and trading services you use for compatibility and fees.
- Stay informed without overreacting: treat this as a sector development—important for long‑term trends but not a trigger for immediate changes to mining setups.