CoinShares (CSHR), one of Europe’s largest crypto asset managers, made its long‑anticipated US market debut on Wednesday after completing a merger with Vine Hill Capital that created the holding company CoinShares PLC.
The transaction, first announced in September and closed late Tuesday, values the business at about $1.2 billion and included a $50 million strategic investment from institutional backers.
CoinShares’ CEO Urges Patience After 25% Slide
The listing, however, got off to a rocky start. On its first session on the Nasdaq, CoinShares’ shares plunged roughly 25%, trading just below $8.30 at the time of writing, according to Yahoo Finance data.
The sharp sell‑off reflects broader turbulence in digital‑asset stocks and follows months of heightened volatility tied to geopolitical tensions in the Middle East and rising oil prices.

Major crypto tokens such as Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH) have struggled to mount sustainable rallies during the same period, putting additional pressure on firms focused on crypto products.
CoinShares CEO Jean‑Marie Mognetti pushed back against reading too much into the market’s initial reaction. Speaking to Barron’s, he said the company’s US listing was driven by readiness rather than market convenience.
“We are not listing because the market is easy. We are listing because the business is ready, and that’s much more important,” Mognetti said, stressing the company’s long‑term strategy over short‑term share price movements.
deSPACs Average 60% Drop In Year One
CoinShares’ US listing is structured as a deSPAC — the operating company formed after a Special Purpose Acquisition (SPAC) merger — and deSPACs have generally performed poorly post‑deal.
Data compiled by SPAC Research and cited by Jay Ritter, director of the IPO Initiative at the University of Florida, show that deSPACs have fallen on average about 60% in the 12 months following their mergers over the last five years.
In his conversation with Barron’s, Mognetti framed the SPAC route as a regulatory and practical choice to facilitate the company’s cross‑border listing rather than as an urgent need for liquidity.
He also told reporters he remains untroubled by the initial market sell‑off and urged patience: “Give us time to just put real numbers out. The market will decide after that.”
Featured image from OpenArt, chart from TradingView.com
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