Nasdaq’s proposed listing rules raise the minimum public float to $15 million and accelerate delistings, which will increase costs for shell companies and raise entry barriers for smaller digital asset treasury (DAT) issuers while advantaging well-capitalized treasuries.
$15M minimum public float for new listings
Faster delisting for firms with compliance deficiencies or market values under $5M
$25M minimum public-offering proceeds for new listings principally operating in China; tighter governance and higher mNAV premiums expected
Nasdaq proposed listing rules raise the minimum public float to $15M, reshaping digital asset treasuries; read analysis, implications for DATs, and recommended issuer actions.
Nasdaq’s proposed listing rules may give established digital asset treasury firms an edge, while raising new barriers for smaller players looking to incorporate cryptocurrencies into their balance sheets.
What are Nasdaq’s proposed listing rules and how will they affect digital asset treasuries?
Nasdaq’s proposed listing rules would lift the minimum public float to $15 million and accelerate delisting for companies that fall below compliance or market-value thresholds. These changes are likely to favor well-managed digital asset treasury (DAT) firms by increasing costs for shell companies and concentrating liquidity in stronger issuers.
How does the $15 million minimum public float change impact shell companies and SPACs?
The $15 million floor makes acquiring a public shell or using a SPAC more expensive for issuers seeking to access public markets. This raises entry costs for smaller teams and could reduce the number of low-float vehicles used to seed digital asset treasuries. Expect a reduction in lower-quality entrants and a higher mNAV premium for reputable DATs.
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Brandon Ferrick, general counsel at Web3 infrastructure firm Douro Labs, said the changes “are unlikely to hurt well-managed digital asset treasury firms” and predicted stronger names will trade at a premium as weaker firms are washed out. Ferrick’s comment was provided to a major industry publication as a sourced remark.
Nasdaq proposes faster delisting for firms with “compliance deficiencies” or a market value below $5 million. Firms with small market caps or weak governance—often newly public or cash-constrained issuers—are most vulnerable. DATs that rely on public shells with limited float face elevated risk of rapid removal from the exchange.
The $25 million minimum public-offering proceeds rule targets new listings of companies principally operating in China. Nasdaq frames this as a governance and investor-protection measure, intended to ensure adequate capital and reduce opaque or high-risk listings tied to regional complexity.
DATs with strong governance and larger public floats may capture greater investor demand and trade at mNAV premiums. Smaller DATs and those relying on low-cost shells will face higher capital requirements and faster removal risk, reducing market fragmentation.
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