HashKey Sets Stage for Hong Kong’s First Crypto-Native IPO
HashKey Holdings Limited has officially submitted its plan to list shares on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, becoming the first homegrown, crypto-native exchange to pursue an IPO in the city.
A Landmark Listing for Hong Kong’s Regulated Crypto Sector
The filing reveals that HashKey aims to issue a little over 240 million shares, with roughly 10% reserved for local retail investors and the remainder placed internationally. The price range – HK$5.95 to HK$6.95 – positions the deal to raise up to HK$1.67 billion ($214.7 million) before expenses. At the midpoint, HashKey expects to net approximately HK$1.43 billion.
Subscription opened Tuesday morning and will close at noon on Dec. 12. Final pricing is scheduled for Dec. 16, with trading set to begin Dec. 17 under ticker 3887.
How HashKey Plans to Spend the Capital
The company outlines a long-term expansion strategy built around four areas:
- 40% dedicated to new products, infrastructure upgrades, and scaling its technology stack
- 40% earmarked for entering new markets and building strategic ecosystem partnerships
- 10% directed toward operations and risk management
- 10% held for general corporate use
HashKey emphasized that its ongoing losses reflect heavy upfront investment to build a regulated, compliant, institution-grade exchange – a business model that typically requires several years of capital before breakeven.
A Business Still in the Investment Phase
The numbers underscore that point. For the first half of 2025, HashKey recorded a HK$506.7 million (about $65 million) net loss – narrower than the year-earlier HK$772.6 million loss. Revenue for the first nine months of the year still managed a modest 4% climb, driven by asset-management growth despite a 24% drop in trading volume.
Hong Kong Tightens – and Expands – Its Crypto Framework
The IPO arrives as Hong Kong reshapes its digital-asset rulebook. Since introducing licensing requirements for virtual asset service providers in 2023, regulators have steadily broadened oversight, including a framework for stablecoin issuers and a recent move allowing licensed exchanges to share order books with global venues to improve liquidity.
HashKey’s listing now stands as a key test for Hong Kong’s ambition: whether a fully regulated crypto exchange can scale, attract institutional capital, and operate profitably under one of the world’s strictest – and most supportive – digital-asset regimes.

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