Kraken's parent company, Payward, has signed a definitive agreement to acquire Bitnomial in a deal valued at up to $550 million. This acquisition instantly grants Kraken the complete set of licenses needed to run a fully regulated crypto derivatives business in the United States, a strategic shortcut that leapfrogs years of potential regulatory hurdles.
The acquisition places Kraken in direct competition with established players like Coinbase and the CME Group. The move comes as Kraken is navigating a complex financial landscape, having confidentially filed for an IPO, according to CNBC. This filing occurred amidst a reported valuation drop from $20 billion to approximately $13.3 billion, following a $200 million investment from Deutsche Boerse.
Why Is This Acquisition a Strategic Shortcut?
The value of Bitnomial lies in its unique and complete regulatory footprint. The firm is the only crypto-native company in the U.S. to hold all three critical licenses from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC):
- Designated Contract Market (DCM): For operating the exchange itself.
- Derivatives Clearing Organization (DCO): For its clearinghouse operations.
- Futures Commission Merchant (FCM): For its brokerage arm.
Building this licensing stack from the ground up would have taken years and immense legal and financial resources. Instead, Kraken acquired it in a single transaction. Bitnomial was engineered for digital assets from its inception, enabling it to offer products like CFTC-regulated crypto margin collateral and perpetual futures that are difficult to integrate into legacy financial systems.
> The shape of a market is determined by its clearing infrastructure, not its front end. Bitnomial spent a decade building it: crypto settlement, crypto collateral, continuous 24/7 markets. These are capabilities that cannot be retrofitted onto legacy systems.
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— Arjun Sethi, Co-CEO of Payward and Kraken
With this purchase, Kraken can now offer U.S. clients a full suite of regulated products, including spot margin trading, perpetual futures, and options. This move fills a major gap in its global offerings, complementing its existing licensed derivatives operations in the UK and European Union.
The benefits also extend to Kraken's B2B infrastructure platform, Payward Services. Partner firms such as fintech companies, banks, and other brokerages can now connect to a fully regulated U.S. derivatives market through a single API, according to Finance Magnates. This "infrastructure-as-a-service" model allows other businesses to offer crypto derivatives without navigating the complex licensing process themselves.
The deal underscores a growing trend in regulated industries: when time-to-market is critical, acquiring existing licensed infrastructure is often a more effective strategy than building it from scratch.








