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Bullish shares rose over 11% after a $4.2 billion deal to acquire Equiniti, enhancing its position in tokenization. The acquisition provides access to vital shareholder records, potentially transforming Bullish into a tokenization powerhouse.
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Bullish (BLSH) shares surged more than 11% following the company’s $4.2 billion agreement to acquire transfer agent Equiniti, with the stock climbing another 1.5% in pre-market trading Wednesday as analysts framed the deal as a transformational move beyond crypto trading.
The acquisition gives Bullish, the crypto platform led by former NYSE president Tom Farley (also CoinDesk's parent company), direct access to one of the financial industry’s core pieces of infrastructure: shareholder records.
Equiniti services nearly 3,000 public companies, including more than 30% of the S&P 500 and over half of the FTSE 100. Analysts at Clear Street said the deal marks “a material step in repositioning Bullish from a crypto exchange to a tokenization infrastructure company.”
The logic behind the acquisition centers on tokenization, the process of turning traditional assets like stocks into blockchain-based digital tokens that can trade continuously and settle instantly.
While Bullish already operates trading infrastructure, custody systems and token issuance tools, analysts said the company lacked direct relationships with the corporate issuers whose shares would ultimately need to be tokenized.
“Equiniti fills the most important gap in Bullish’s tokenization thesis: issuer access and transfer-agent authority,” Clear Street wrote.
Transfer agents act as the official record keepers for public companies, tracking who owns shares, processing dividends and handling shareholder communications. Bullish therefore gains the regulated framework and client network needed to potentially bring tokenized equities into mainstream finance.
The deal also reflects intensifying competition around tokenized securities. Analysts pointed to recent moves by DTCC, Computershare and Securitize as signs that Wall Street infrastructure firms are racing to modernize market plumbing using blockchain rails.
Clear Street maintained a Buy rating with a $50 price target, arguing the acquisition could sharply improve Bullish’s earnings quality by adding recurring, fee-based revenue less tied to crypto trading volumes.
Compass Point took a more cautious stance, reiterating a Neutral rating and $36 target. The firm said Bullish’s current valuation already prices in much of the expected growth, though it acknowledged potential upside if Bullish succeeds in cross-selling tokenization services to Equiniti’s issuer base.
Both firms agreed the acquisition represents a long-term bet that tokenized securities move from experimentation to core financial infrastructure over the next several years.
The acquisition is significant as it allows Bullish to access crucial shareholder records, positioning the company to expand into tokenization beyond just crypto trading.
Bullish agreed to acquire Equiniti for $4.2 billion.
Equiniti services nearly 3,000 public companies, including over 30% of the S&P 500 and more than half of the FTSE 100, making it a key player in managing shareholder records.

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