Telegram has successfully raised $1.7 billion in a bond offering that drew overwhelming investor interest, exceeding initial targets and signaling strong confidence in the platform’s growth trajectory.
The bond, which closed on May 28, features a 9% annual yield and marks another major financial milestone for the messaging app widely embraced by the crypto community.
A significant portion of the proceeds—nearly $1 billion—will be used to settle outstanding debt from a prior bond issuance maturing in 2026. The remainder, approximately $745 million, will fuel operational expenses and strategic initiatives, as Telegram continues expanding its global footprint.
Co-founder Pavel Durov highlighted the investor enthusiasm in a post, revealing the offering had to be upsized due to demand. Backers reportedly include institutional heavyweights such as BlackRock and Abu Dhabi’s Mubadala. Investors are also being offered the opportunity to buy Telegram shares at a 20% discount in the event of a future IPO.
Beyond the bond sale, Telegram is also exploring deeper AI integrations. A potential deal is in the works with Elon Musk’s xAI—creator of Grok—that would embed the chatbot within Telegram’s platform for one year. The partnership, if finalized, could bring in $300 million and grant Telegram a 50% cut of xAI subscription revenue generated through the app. While Musk has disputed the finalization of the deal, Telegram says the terms are still being ironed out.
OKX has teamed up with Ethereum development firm Consensys to integrate its decentralized exchange (DEX) aggregator into MetaMask, giving users access to faster, more efficient token swaps across over 500 DEXs on 25 blockchains.
Large institutions accelerated their retreat from equities last month, unloading roughly $50.8 billion in U.S. shares, according to S&P Global.
Bitdeer Technologies, a Bitcoin mining firm based in Singapore, is gearing up to raise $330 million through a fresh offering of senior convertible notes maturing in 2031.
Institutional traders on Deribit and Crypto.com can now post BlackRock’s tokenized U.S. Treasury fund, BUIDL, as margin—an industry first for a low-volatility, yield-bearing digital security.