Bitcoin Magazine
Crypto Exchange Bullish Strikes $4.2 Billion Deal for Equiniti to Build Tokenized Securities Infrastructure
Bullish has agreed to acquire global transfer agent Equiniti in a $4.2 billion transaction that aims to fuse traditional market infrastructure with blockchain-based systems, marking one of the largest deals tied to tokenized securities.
The agreement combines Bullish’s digital asset platform with Equiniti’s role as a core record-keeper for public companies. Equiniti services nearly 3,000 issuer clients, supports more than 20 million shareholders and processes about $500 billion in annual payments. Transfer agents maintain shareholder records, manage dividend distribution and handle corporate actions, placing them at the center of equity market operations.
Under the terms, Bullish will assume $1.85 billion of Equiniti’s debt and issue about $2.35 billion in stock, subject to adjustments. The companies expect the deal to close in January 2027, pending regulatory approvals.
The combined firm is projected to generate about $1.3 billion in adjusted revenue in 2026, with more than $500 million in adjusted EBITDA less capital expenditures. Bullish expects revenue growth of 6% to 8% from 2027 through 2029, with tokenization and blockchain services contributing a larger share over time.
Blockchain tech is making a push
The transaction reflects a broader push across financial markets to bring equities and other assets onto blockchain infrastructure. Bullish executives frame the acquisition as a way to address a gap in tokenized markets: the absence of a regulated transfer agent built for digital securities.
Bullish provides token design, issuance, compliance and trading services, along with liquidity and market data through its ownership of CoinDesk. Equiniti contributes established relationships with listed companies and regulators, along with its role as a system of record for equity ownership.
Together, the firms plan to offer an integrated platform that spans the full lifecycle of tokenized assets, from issuance to registry management and secondary trading. The system is designed to operate alongside existing financial infrastructure, including central securities depositories, custodians and broker-dealers.
Executives argue the structure could allow issuers to track ownership in real time, replacing settlement processes that can take days. The platform also aims to automate corporate actions and expand access to investors across jurisdictions. For investors, the model promises continuous trading, faster settlement and fewer intermediaries.
Bullish said they plan to support trading in tokenized equities outside the United States, targeting international investors seeking access to digital representations of shares. The platform will also bridge traditional certificated shares with tokenized formats, allowing both to coexist within a single system.
Equiniti will continue to operate under its ex

