| Type | Public |
|---|---|
| Nasdaq: GLXY | |
| Industry | Financial services Investment management Cryptocurrency Data center infrastructure |
| Founded | February 2018; 8 years ago (2018-02) |
| Founders | Michael Novogratz |
| Headquarters | New York City, New York, U.S., |
Key people | Michael Novogratz (CEO) |
| Products | Digital asset trading, lending, asset management, staking, custody, tokenization, data center infrastructure |
| AUM | US$9.0 billion (March 31, 2026)[1] |
| Total assets | US$10.0 billion (March 31, 2026)[1] |
| Website | galaxy.com |
Galaxy Digital Inc., doing business as Galaxy, is an American financial services and infrastructure company headquartered in New York City. The company focuses on digital assets, cryptocurrency, blockchain infrastructure, and artificial intelligence and high-performance computing data center infrastructure. Its digital asset businesses include over-the-counter trading, lending, investment banking, asset management, staking, custody, and tokenization technology.[2] It was founded in 2018 by billionaire Michael Novogratz.[3]
Background
[edit]In February 2018, Galaxy was founded by Fortress Investment Group co-founder Michael Novogratz.[4] Galaxy Digital went public on the Toronto Stock Exchange in 2018.[5]
Galaxy Digital Holdings Ltd. was one of the few cryptocurrency companies required to publish financial results. In the first nine months of 2018, the company lost $136 million in cryptocurrency trading.[6] In November 2018, Galaxy participated in an $80 million funding round for blockchain technology company Bitfury.[7]
During the bankruptcy proceedings of FTX, Forbes reported that a Galaxy-managed fund could realize more than $1 billion in gains from discounted Solana tokens purchased from the FTX estate.[8]
In May 2025, Galaxy completed a reorganization and its Class A common stock began trading on the Nasdaq Global Select Market under the ticker symbol GLXY.[9] Galaxy completed its voluntary delisting from the Toronto Stock Exchange in March 2026, consolidating its public listing on Nasdaq as its sole exchange.[1]
Business
[edit]Galaxy reports its activities across three segments: Digital Assets, Data Centers, and Treasury and Corporate.[10]
Digital assets
[edit]Galaxy's Digital Assets segment includes its Global Markets business and its Asset Management & Infrastructure Solutions business. The company describes the segment as serving institutional clients through trading, lending, brokerage, investment banking, asset management, staking, self-custody, and tokenization technology.[11][12]
Galaxy Global Markets provides institutional access to over-the-counter and electronic trading, spot and derivatives execution, lending, structured products, and investment banking services. Galaxy's investment banking business advises digital-asset companies on mergers and acquisitions, capital raising, and capital markets transactions.[12] As of March 31, 2026, Galaxy reported 1,691 trading counterparties and an average loan book of approximately $1.4 billion.[1]
Galaxy Asset Management provides exchange-traded product strategies, alternative investment strategies, separately managed accounts, venture capital funds, hedge funds, and opportunistic mandates focused on digital assets, blockchain infrastructure, and adjacent emerging technologies.[11] As of March 31, 2026, Galaxy reported approximately $5.0 billion in assets under management, $3.2 billion in assets under stake, and approximately $9 billion in assets on platform, a broader metric that included assets under management, assets under stake, and certain assets managed by a commodity pool operator within Galaxy's Global Markets division, with some overlap among categories.[5]
Galaxy's Infrastructure Solutions business includes staking, tokenization, and custodial technology. Galaxy's staking platform supports native staking, liquid staking, staking APIs, and the use of staked assets as collateral or working capital. The company reported $3.2 billion of assets under stake as of March 31, 2026, and said its institutional staking infrastructure included globally distributed validators, slashing protection, custody integrations, and API-based reporting for institutional clients.[13] In December 2025, Galaxy acquired Alluvial Finance and became the development company for Liquid Collective, an enterprise-grade liquid staking protocol.[14] In April 2026, BlackRock selected Galaxy as one of the approved validators for the iShares Staked Ethereum Trust ETF, BlackRock's first rewards-generating crypto exchange-traded product.[15]
Galaxy's tokenization business uses GK8, its institutional custody and tokenization platform, to issue, manage, and distribute tokenized financial assets. Galaxy describes its tokenization services as including onchain advisory, tokenization technology, and placement services for institutional tokenized products, including structured products, funds, real-world assets, and equities.[16] In January 2026, Galaxy announced the initial closing of Galaxy CLO 2025-1, a tokenized collateralized loan obligation on the Avalanche blockchain, with approximately $75 million financed at launch and a $50 million anchor allocation from Grove.[17] In September 2025, Galaxy and Superstate announced the tokenization of Galaxy's Class A common stock on the Solana blockchain, with Superstate acting as digital transfer agent for approved investors.[18]
In June 2026, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission proposed amendments to rescind Regulation NMS Rule 611, the trade-through rule for national market system stocks, and Rule 610(e), which restricts locking and crossing quotations.[19] Galaxy's head of research, Alex Thorn, argued that the proposal could remove a major market-structure obstacle for tokenized U.S. equities trading in decentralized finance, because automated market makers execute against liquidity pools and bonding curves rather than routing orders across exchanges to comply with protected quotations.[20][21] The development was relevant to Galaxy's tokenization business, which uses its GK8 platform to tokenize institutional financial assets and has included tokenized structured products, real-world assets, and Galaxy's own Class A common stock.[16]
Galaxy has presented these services as part of a strategy to connect traditional financial institutions with blockchain-based market infrastructure. In its 2025 annual report, Novogratz wrote that the future digital economy would be built on "regulated rails, trusted custody solutions, and tokenization platforms," and said that infrastructure and regulation were converging to bring institutional capital onchain.[2] During Galaxy's first-quarter 2026 earnings call, management said that large financial institutions were preparing to move onto blockchain-based rails and would require wallet and custody technology, trade settlement, clearing, collateral management, corporate treasury, and fund administration infrastructure. Galaxy said it was productizing its digital infrastructure platform into a business-to-business model through white-labeled solutions, bespoke integrations, and custom infrastructure for institutions.[22]
Data centers
[edit]Galaxy's Data Centers segment develops high-performance computing infrastructure for artificial intelligence and other compute-intensive workloads. The company's principal data center project is the Helios campus in West Texas, which was originally used for bitcoin mining infrastructure and later converted toward AI and HPC data center use.[2]
Galaxy has said that Helios has more than 3.4 gigawatts of total planned power capacity and, at 1.6 gigawatts of approved grid capacity, is projected to be the largest 100% front-of-the-meter data center campus in the world.[5]
In August 2025, Galaxy announced that it had closed a $1.4 billion project financing for the Helios campus.[23] Under lease agreements with CoreWeave, Galaxy said the Helios campus covered 800 megawatts of gross power capacity and 526 megawatts of critical IT load across Phases I, II, and III. Galaxy described the CoreWeave lease arrangements as having a 15-year base term, two five-year extension options, more than $1 billion of anticipated average annual revenue, and approximately 90% anticipated average lease-level EBITDA margins, based on committed contractual terms and internal estimates.[1]
In April 2026, Galaxy delivered its first data hall to CoreWeave and said it remained on budget and on schedule to deliver substantially all of the 133 megawatts of critical IT load under Phase I by the end of the second quarter of 2026. Galaxy also said Phase II greenfield development for 260 megawatts of additional critical IT load was underway and that data hall deliveries for Phase II were expected to begin in the first half of 2027.[1]
In January 2026, Galaxy announced that the Electric Reliability Council of Texas had approved an additional 830 megawatts of power capacity at Helios, bringing total approved gross power capacity at the campus to more than 1.6 gigawatts.[24] In March 2026, ERCOT published PGRR145, titled "Batch Zero Process for Large Load Interconnections", a proposed transitional process for ERCOT to study the system-wide reliability impacts of qualifying large loads.[25]
In Galaxy's 2025 annual report, Novogratz described the Helios campus as the company's flagship AI data center campus and said the first 800 megawatts leased to CoreWeave represented more than $7.5 billion of capital investment. He further wrote that, combined with the newly approved 830 megawatts in a build-to-suit model, Helios likely represented more than $15 billion of long-term digital infrastructure investment, and described Galaxy's broader ambition as building and acquiring additional sites toward a multi-hundred-billion-dollar portfolio of digital infrastructure assets.[2]
During Galaxy's first-quarter 2026 earnings call, president and chief investment officer Christopher Ferraro said the company had begun procuring critical infrastructure for the 830 megawatt Helios development, including main power transformers and circuit breakers. Ferraro also said Galaxy was evaluating a pipeline of U.S. data center opportunities, that several sites had progressed to letters of intent, and that the company expected to discuss a multi-campus portfolio within 2026.[26] In the same call, Novogratz said new projects outside Helios were separate from the existing Helios expansion, while Ferraro said Galaxy was focused on both a multi-campus strategy and a multi-tenant strategy.[27]
Galaxy has also made venture investments related to AI and high-performance computing infrastructure. In 2024, Galaxy Digital participated in Etched's $120 million Series A financing round. Etched is a semiconductor startup developing Sohu, an application-specific integrated circuit designed for transformer-model inference, with the company partnering with TSMC to fabricate its chips.Allen, Jesse (July 10, 2024). "Startup Funding: Q2 2024". Semiconductor Engineering. Retrieved June 13, 2026.Cherney, Max A. (June 25, 2024). "AI startup Etched raises $120 million to develop specialized chip". Reuters. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
Custody and tokenization infrastructure
[edit]In February 2023, Galaxy completed its acquisition of substantially all assets of GK8, an institutional digital asset custody platform, for approximately $44 million. Galaxy said GK8's technology supported custody, staking, decentralized finance, tokenization, non-fungible token support, and trading services.[28] Reuters reported in December 2022 that Galaxy had agreed to buy GK8 from Celsius Network following Celsius's Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing.[29]
In June 2024, Galaxy announced the tokenization of the "Empress Caterina", a 1708 Stradivarius violin owned by Animoca Brands co-founder Yat Siu, using GK8's Tokenization Wizard. The tokenization was used in connection with a financing transaction between Siu and Galaxy and was recorded on the Ethereum blockchain as a non-fungible token.[30] The Strad described the transaction as a high-profile case of tokenization involving a Stradivari violin valued at $9 million.[31]
In September 2025, Galaxy and Superstate announced that Galaxy stockholders could tokenize and hold shares of Galaxy's Class A common stock on the Solana blockchain, with Superstate serving as digital transfer agent. Davis Polk, which advised Galaxy on the transaction, described it as the first tokenization of SEC-registered public equity directly on a major blockchain.[32][33]
AllUnity
[edit]In December 2023, Galaxy, DWS Group, and Flow Traders announced plans to form AllUnity, a joint venture focused on issuing a fully collateralized euro-denominated stablecoin.[34] The partners said AllUnity would combine DWS's portfolio management and product-structuring capabilities, Flow Traders' liquidity-provisioning and market-connectivity expertise, and Galaxy's digital-asset infrastructure.[35]
In July 2025, AllUnity received an electronic money institution license from Germany's BaFin to issue EURAU, a euro-denominated stablecoin compliant with the European Union's Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCAR).[36] CoinDesk reported that AllUnity would introduce Germany's first regulated, euro-denominated stablecoin after receiving the BaFin license.[37] AllUnity described EURAU as a 100% reserved euro stablecoin issued under a multi-bank reserve model, with proof-of-reserves and regulatory reporting, and said it was designed for 24/7 cross-border settlement, financial institutions, fintechs, corporate treasuries, and enterprise clients.[38] Galaxy stated that GK8, its institutional custody and tokenization platform, provides tokenization and custodial infrastructure for EURAU.[39]
AllUnity's business model is part of the broader reserve-backed stablecoin market, in which issuers can generate revenue from the assets held to back tokens. The economic scale of that model has been demonstrated by larger dollar-denominated issuers: Tether reported more than $10 billion of year-to-date net profit by the end of the third quarter of 2025, with more than $174 billion of USD₮ in circulation, while Circle reported $2.747 billion of total revenue and reserve income for full-year 2025 and $75.3 billion of USDC in circulation at year-end.[40][41] Citi forecast in 2025 that global stablecoin supply could reach approximately $1.9 trillion by 2030 in its base case, with a high case of $4 trillion, and said banks could participate in the stablecoin ecosystem through issuance, custody, reserve management, treasury brokerage, and foreign-exchange services.[42]
In 2025, AllUnity announced several infrastructure and institutional-adoption partnerships. BitGo partnered with AllUnity to provide wallet and custody infrastructure for EURAU.[43] In November 2025, AllUnity and Deutsche Börse Group signed a memorandum of understanding to integrate AllUnity's euro-backed stablecoin into Deutsche Börse's financial market infrastructure, beginning with institutional-grade custody through Clearstream and later planned integration across Deutsche Börse Group's service portfolio.[44] AllUnity also partnered with Projective Group to integrate EURAU into corporate treasury workflows through SAP Digital Currency Hub.[45] By the end of 2025, AllUnity said EURAU had expanded beyond Ethereum to multiple layer-2 networks, including Optimism, Arbitrum, and Base, and had reached approximately $2 million to $4 million in daily trading volume and $20.44 million in total value locked.[46]
Citi forecast in 2025 that global stablecoin issuance would reach approximately $1.9 trillion by 2030 in its base case. Stablecoins 2030 (PDF) (Report). Citi Global Perspectives & Solutions. September 2025. Retrieved June 13, 2026. Using Citi’s 2030 base-case forecast of approximately $1.9 trillion in global stablecoin issuance, AllUnity’s addressable market can be framed as the euro-denominated portion of that future stablecoin supply. If euro stablecoins capture a portion of Citi’s projected global stablecoin market, the implied euro-stablecoin float would be approximately $95 billion, $190 billion, and $285 billion, respectively. This represents the broad issuance TAM for regulated euro stablecoins such as EURAU.
GalaxyOne
[edit]In October 2025, Galaxy launched GalaxyOne, a financial technology platform for U.S.-based individual investors seeking access to traditional and digital markets from a single application. In its Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 2026, Galaxy described GalaxyOne's core offerings as including access to a high-yield demand deposit account offered by Cross River Bank for U.S.-based depositors, a debt security issued by Galaxy Digital LP and guaranteed by Galaxy Digital Holdings LP for U.S. accredited investors, commission-free U.S. equities trading through DriveWealth, and crypto trading through Paxos.[11]
At launch, Galaxy said GalaxyOne included four main products: Galaxy Premium Yield, GalaxyOne Cash, GalaxyOne Crypto, and GalaxyOne Brokerage. Galaxy Premium Yield was described as an investment note available only to U.S. accredited investors, with an 8.00% annual percentage yield at launch, interest accruing daily and paid monthly into the GalaxyOne Cash account, and yield generated by Galaxy's institutional lending business. GalaxyOne Cash was described as a high-yield cash deposit account insured through Cross River Bank up to applicable FDIC limits. GalaxyOne Crypto supported trading and transfers of bitcoin, ether, and solana, while GalaxyOne Brokerage provided commission-free trading of more than 2,000 U.S. stocks and exchange-traded funds, including individual brokerage accounts, traditional and Roth IRAs, fractional shares, and an optional stock lending program.[47] Galaxy stated that Galaxy Premium Yield was not a bank deposit and was not FDIC insured, and that crypto assets on GalaxyOne were held through Paxos Trust Company and were not insured by the FDIC or SIPC.[47]
GalaxyOne was originally developed under the name Fierce, a financial application software platform that Galaxy acquired in 2024. Galaxy said the platform was led by Zac Prince, a managing director at Galaxy, alongside the original Fierce development team, and that former Fierce chief executive Rob Cornish would support the platform as Galaxy's chief technology officer.[47] CoinDesk described the launch as placing Galaxy in competition with retail financial platforms such as Robinhood and Coinbase by combining yield products with crypto, stocks, and ETF trading.[48]
In March 2026, Galaxy launched Solana staking on GalaxyOne for eligible clients. The company said users could earn up to an estimated 6.50% in variable staking rewards on SOL, with no platform commission through December 31, 2026, and that GalaxyOne staking was powered by Galaxy's institutional validator infrastructure.[49]
In April 2026, Galaxy announced GalaxyOne for Business, a new account type for U.S.-based limited liability companies, trusts, and other business entities. Galaxy said the business product would provide cash management, brokerage investments, digital asset management, and staking in a single treasury platform. The announced features included up to 8.00% yield on cash investments of up to $1 million for accredited U.S. business accounts through Galaxy Premium Yield, a commercial checking account with 3.25% APY at announcement, crypto trading and custody for BTC, ETH, SOL, and PAXG through Paxos, commission-free U.S. equities trading through FIN2 and DriveWealth, and SOL staking.[50]
Venture investments
[edit]Galaxy's asset management business includes a venture capital franchise focused on early-stage companies in blockchain infrastructure and applications. In June 2025, Galaxy announced the final close of Galaxy Ventures Fund I with more than $175 million in commitments, exceeding its $150 million target. The fund focuses on early-stage companies developing infrastructure and applications for the onchain economy, including stablecoins, payments, tokenization, blockchain protocols, and software infrastructure.[51]
Research and media
[edit]Galaxy publishes digital asset research and produces Galaxy Brains, a podcast hosted by Alex Thorn, Galaxy's head of research. Galaxy describes the podcast as a weekly program covering trends and events across the cryptocurrency ecosystem, with Thorn and members of Galaxy's research team discussing developments in crypto and blockchain technology.[52] Guests have included Anthony Pompliano, who appeared in episodes on the convergence of traditional and digital markets and on AI-generated financial research,[53][54] and Michael Saylor, who appeared in episodes discussing bitcoin, MicroStrategy, digital banking, and the overlap of bitcoin and artificial intelligence.[55][56]
Notable transactions and market developments
[edit]In June 2024, Galaxy announced the tokenization of the "Empress Caterina", a 1708 Stradivarius violin owned by Animoca Brands co-founder Yat Siu. Galaxy said the violin was valued at approximately $9 million and had previously been owned by European royalty and nobility, including Catherine the Great. The tokenization was completed through GK8, Galaxy's institutional custody and tokenization platform, and recorded as a non-fungible token on the Ethereum blockchain for use in a financing transaction between Siu and Galaxy Global Markets; Galaxy stated that the tokenized instrument would not be available in a secondary market or public offering.[57]
In July 2025, Galaxy announced that it had completed the sale of more than 80,000 bitcoin, valued at more than $9 billion, for a Satoshi-era investor. Galaxy described the transaction as one of the largest notional bitcoin transactions in the history of digital assets.[58] CoinDesk reported that bitcoin rebounded after Galaxy confirmed completion of the sale.[59]
In June 2026, Galaxy launched institutional over-the-counter prediction markets trading, offering clients access to non-sports event contracts on Kalshi and Polymarket through its Global Markets desk. Galaxy said it executed a $10 million trade with Arca on Kalshi at launch tied to the outcome of the proposed CLARITY Act.[60][61]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f "Galaxy Announces First Quarter 2026 Financial Results" (Press release). Galaxy Digital. April 28, 2026. Retrieved June 13, 2026 – via SEC EDGAR.
- ^ a b c d "GLXY 2025 Annual Report & CEO Letter". Galaxy. April 8, 2026. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ Pollard, Amelia; Agnew, Harriet (October 20, 2024). "Hedge funds cash in on Trump-fuelled crypto boom". Financial Times. Retrieved January 21, 2026.
- ^ Loizos, Connie (March 26, 2019). "A look inside crypto firm Galaxy Digital, founded by 'sidelined' Wall Street legend Mike Novogratz". TechCrunch. Retrieved January 21, 2026.
- ^ a b c "Q1 2026 Overview". Galaxy Digital Investor Relations. April 2026. Retrieved June 13, 2026. Cite error: The named reference "q1-overview" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ Lam, Eric (November 28, 2018). "Mike Novogratz's Crypto Trading Desk Lost $136 Million in Nine Months". Bloomberg. Retrieved November 28, 2018.
- ^ Munsterman, Ruben; David, Ruth (November 6, 2018). "Billionaire Novogratz Invests in Cryptocurrency Firm Bitfury". Bloomberg.
- ^ Bambysheva, Nina. "This Crypto Billionaire's Fund Could Reap More Than $1 Billion From The FTX Bankruptcy". Forbes. Retrieved January 21, 2026.
- ^ Lang, Hannah (May 16, 2025). "Mike Novogratz's Galaxy Digital debuts on Nasdaq in bumper week for crypto". Reuters. Retrieved January 20, 2026.
- ^ "Galaxy Digital Inc. Form 10-Q for the quarterly period ended March 31, 2026". SEC EDGAR. May 8, 2026. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ a b c "Galaxy Digital Inc. Form 10-Q for the quarterly period ended March 31, 2026". SEC EDGAR. May 8, 2026. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ a b "Institutional & Regulated Crypto Trading". Galaxy. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "Galaxy Staking". Galaxy. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "Galaxy Expands into Liquid Staking as Development Company for Liquid Collective" (Press release). Galaxy Digital. December 4, 2025. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "Galaxy Powers Staking Infrastructure for ETHB, BlackRock's First Rewards-Generating Crypto ETP". Galaxy. April 9, 2026. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ a b "Tokenized Assets for Institutions". Galaxy. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "Galaxy Announces Initial Closing of Debut Tokenized CLO at $75 Million" (Press release). Galaxy Digital. January 15, 2026. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "Galaxy Tokenizes GLXY Stock on Solana with Superstate". Galaxy. September 3, 2025. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "SEC Proposes Rescission of Regulation NMS Rules 611 and 610(e)" (Press release). U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. June 11, 2026. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "SEC Moves Towards 'Tokenized Field of Dreams'". Markets Media. June 12, 2026. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "SEC rule rollback could unlock tokenized U.S. stock trading in DeFi". crypto.news. June 12, 2026. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "Galaxy Digital First Quarter 2026 Earnings Call Transcript". Galaxy Digital. April 28, 2026. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "Galaxy Closes $1.4B Project Financing to Accelerate Helios AI Data Center Campus" (Press release). Galaxy Digital. August 15, 2025. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "Galaxy Completes ERCOT Interconnection Studies and Secures Approval for Additional 830 Megawatts at Helios Data Center Campus" (Press release). Galaxy Digital. January 15, 2026. Retrieved June 13, 2026 – via PR Newswire.
- ^ "PGRR145 Batch Zero Process for Large Load Interconnections". ERCOT. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "Galaxy Digital First Quarter 2026 Earnings Call Transcript". Galaxy Digital. April 28, 2026. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "Galaxy Digital First Quarter 2026 Earnings Call Transcript". Galaxy Digital. April 28, 2026. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "Galaxy Completes Acquisition of Leading Institutional Custody Platform GK8" (Press release). Galaxy Digital. February 23, 2023. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "Galaxy wins bid for collapsed crypto lender Celsius' GK8 unit". Reuters. December 2, 2022. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "Galaxy Announces Tokenization of the 1708 Stradivarius Violin, Empress Caterina" (Press release). Galaxy Digital. June 4, 2024. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "A digital asset company has tokenised the 1708 'Empress Caterina' Stradivari violin". The Strad. June 6, 2024. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "Galaxy launches GLXY tokenized public shares on Solana". Davis Polk. September 3, 2025. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "Galaxy Tokenizes GLXY Stock on Solana with Superstate". Galaxy. September 3, 2025. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "Galaxy, DWS and Flow Traders Announce Intention to Launch AllUnity to Issue a Regulated EUR-Denominated Stablecoin" (Press release). Galaxy Digital. December 13, 2023. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "DWS, Flow Traders and Galaxy announce the intention to launch AllUnity" (Press release). Flow Traders. December 13, 2023. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "DWS venture gets German finance regulator's approval for euro stablecoin". Reuters. July 2, 2025. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ Allison, Ian (July 2, 2025). "Deutsche Bank's DWS, Galaxy and Flow Traders to Introduce German-Regulated Stablecoin". CoinDesk. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "AllUnity Launches EURAU — Germany's First Fully Reserved, MiCAR-Compliant EURO stablecoin" (Press release). AllUnity. July 31, 2025. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "Celebrating the Launch of AllUnity's EURAU Stablecoin — Powered by GK8, a Galaxy Company". Galaxy. August 1, 2025. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "Tether Attestation Reports Q1-Q3 2025 Profit Surpassing $10B, Record Levels in U.S. Treasuries Exposure". Tether. October 31, 2025. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "Circle Reports 4th Quarter & Fiscal Year 2025 Financial Results" (Press release). Circle. February 25, 2026. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ Stablecoins 2030 (PDF) (Report). Citi Global Perspectives & Solutions. September 2025. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "AllUnity Announces Strategic Partnership with BitGo to Secure Institutional-Grade Infrastructure for EURAU" (Press release). AllUnity. July 15, 2025. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "Deutsche Börse Group and AllUnity Partner to Expand Stablecoin Adoption in Europe" (Press release). AllUnity. November 26, 2025. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "AllUnity and Projective Group Join Forces to Bring Stablecoin Innovation into Corporate Treasury" (Press release). AllUnity. November 17, 2025. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "AllUnity's 2025 Year in Review: From License to Live Infrastructure". AllUnity. January 7, 2026. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ a b c "Galaxy Launches GalaxyOne, Bringing Institutional-Quality Financial Offerings to Individual Investors" (Press release). Galaxy Digital. October 6, 2025. Retrieved June 13, 2026 – via PR Newswire.
- ^ Braun, Helene (October 6, 2025). "Galaxy Takes on Robinhood, Coinbase With 4%-8% Yield App; Stock Jumps 8%". CoinDesk. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "Introducing Staking on GalaxyOne" (Press release). Galaxy Digital. March 31, 2026. Retrieved June 13, 2026 – via PR Newswire.
- ^ "Galaxy Expands GalaxyOne with Launch of GalaxyOne for Business". Galaxy. April 14, 2026. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "Galaxy Announces Final Close of Oversubscribed Galaxy Ventures Fund I at Over $175M" (Press release). Galaxy Digital. June 26, 2025. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "Galaxy Brains". Galaxy. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "What Comes After Crypto with Anthony Pompliano". Galaxy. November 13, 2025. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "AI Eats Wall Street Research with Anthony Pompliano". Galaxy. June 11, 2026. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "Michael Saylor on BTC at $100K and the Future of MicroStrategy". Galaxy. December 11, 2024. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "Michael Saylor & The Ultimate Bitcoin Strategy". Galaxy. December 18, 2025. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "Galaxy Announces Tokenization of the 1708 Stradivarius Violin, "Empress Caterina"" (Press release). Galaxy Digital. June 4, 2024. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "Galaxy Executes One of the Largest Notional Bitcoin Transactions Ever" (Press release). Galaxy Digital. July 25, 2025. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ Vaidya, Omkar Godbole (July 25, 2025). "Bitcoin Rebounds After Galaxy Completes Sale of $9B BTC From Satoshi-Era Whale". CoinDesk. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ "Galaxy Launches Institutional OTC Prediction Markets Trading" (Press release). Galaxy Digital. June 2, 2026. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
- ^ Sinclair, Sebastian (June 2, 2026). "Galaxy Enters Institutional Prediction Markets With $10 Million Arca Trade". CoinDesk. Retrieved June 13, 2026.
External links
[edit]- Investment management companies of the United States
- Hedge fund firms in New York City
- American companies established in 2018
- Financial services companies established in 2018
- 2018 establishments in New York City
- Private equity firms based in New York (state)
- Cryptocurrency companies
- Companies listed on the Nasdaq
- Companies formerly listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange
