CertiK, a blockchain security firm known for auditing smart contracts and monitoring crypto risks, is not ruling out a future stock market listing.
The company’s co-founder and CEO Ronghui Gu said its current valuation is around $2 billion, positioning a potential IPO as a logical next phase rather than an immediate plan.
Gu made the remarks during an interview at the World Economic Forum in Davos, where global political and business leaders gathered to discuss economic and technology trends.
IPO remains a goal, not a timeline
CertiK does not yet have a defined roadmap toward going public.
Gu said the company would need additional capital and deeper strategic partnerships before it could realistically pursue a listing.
He described a public debut as more than a corporate milestone, suggesting it could serve as a benchmark for the broader Web3 infrastructure sector.
According to Gu, an eventual IPO would be viewed by industry observers as a signal that blockchain security companies can mature into large-scale, publicly traded businesses.
Why CertiK’s position matters
CertiK plays a critical role in the crypto ecosystem, providing security audits and risk intelligence for decentralized applications and blockchain protocols.
As hacks, exploits, and smart contract vulnerabilities continue to shape market confidence, security firms have become central to the industry’s credibility.
A potential IPO by CertiK would highlight how infrastructure companies—not just exchanges or token issuers—are becoming core pillars of the digital asset economy.
Crypto firms increasingly exploring public listings
CertiK is not alone in considering public markets.
Hardware wallet maker Ledger has also been reported as weighing a future IPO, while custody provider BitGo recently entered the public market with a valuation exceeding $2 billion and began trading on the New York Stock Exchange.
Coinbase’s listing in 2021 marked a turning point for US-based crypto companies seeking mainstream investor access.
Stablecoin issuer Circle followed with its own public debut in June 2025, reinforcing a trend toward institutional legitimacy in the sector.
Davos context: policy and partnerships in focus
Gu’s comments emerged amid broader discussions in Davos, where crypto executives, policymakers, and investors debated regulation, cross-industry partnerships, and the next phase of Web3 adoption.
The presence of multiple crypto leaders at the event underscored how digital assets are increasingly part of global economic conversations rather than a fringe technology experiment.
What to watch next
CertiK’s IPO ambitions remain aspirational, but its valuation and strategic positioning suggest the company is preparing for a longer-term transition toward public markets.
If realized, such a move could redefine how investors evaluate blockchain infrastructure firms and accelerate the push for more crypto-native companies to enter traditional financial markets.
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