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Ledger's Trust Advantage: The French Crypto Leader Heading to Wall Street
Founded in 2014, Ledger has built its reputation on a singular principle: security. Now, as the company prepares for its New York Stock Exchange debut—valued at over $4 billion and backed by Goldman Sachs, Jefferies, and Barclays—it’s clear that trust has become the engine of growth. For a hardware wallet manufacturer navigating the crypto landscape’s most treacherous terrain, this paradox reveals something profound about digital asset management in 2026.
Building Credibility Through Crisis
Ledger’s path to Wall Street is unusual precisely because it’s traveled through adversity. The company suffered a 2020 data breach affecting 270,000 customers, a $500,000 hack in 2023, and a supplier vulnerability via Global-e in early 2026. Each incident could have triggered an exodus of users. Instead, the opposite occurred.
When crypto theft reached an estimated $17 billion in 2025 according to Chainalysis, users didn’t abandon security solutions—they rushed toward them. As hacks multiplied, Ledger’s sales accelerated to record levels, reaching hundreds of millions in revenue. CEO Pascal Gauthier explains this counterintuitive dynamic plainly: consumers increasingly demand control over their digital keys, viewing Ledger’s proven security infrastructure as the solution, not the problem. This transformation of security anxiety into commercial momentum has reframed how the company positions itself.
Why New York Became Essential
For Ledger, the IPO timing reflects a strategic calculation. The Trump administration’s embrace of cryptocurrency as a national priority, combined with the crypto infrastructure boom demonstrated by BitGo’s successful NYSE listing (valued at $2 billion), created a gravitational pull toward American capital markets. As Pascal Gauthier noted, capital migration toward crypto is now concentrated in New York—not Europe, despite Ledger’s Paris roots.
The 2023 Series C valuation of $1.5 billion makes the current $4 billion IPO target an important validation. Yet this growth trajectory doesn’t exist in isolation: it reflects genuine market demand for the products Ledger manufactures, particularly as institutional investors and retail users alike prioritize asset custody solutions.
The Risk-Reward Calculus
Ledger’s business model presents an unusual investment thesis: growth correlated directly with increased security threats. The higher crypto theft climbs, the more urgent users’ need for hardware wallets becomes. This dynamic attracts capital precisely because it’s defensible—there’s no scenario where security becomes less important in digital finance.
However, it also anchors company performance to crypto volatility and threat levels. Investors backing the IPO are effectively betting that security will remain a premium concern, that Ledger maintains its technological edge, and that the company can convert brand recognition into sustained profitability.
A European Company Reaches for Global Scale
Ledger’s journey from Paris to Wall Street symbolizes the broader migration of European tech toward American financial markets. The company’s 2025 launch of a crypto debit card in the United States—unprecedented in the Ledger product line—signals ambitions extending well beyond hardware wallets. This expansion suggests the company views its IPO not merely as a fundraising event but as a gateway to broader financial services integration.
As one of the first French companies to establish itself as a genuine player in crypto infrastructure, Ledger is positioning itself to demonstrate that European innovation, combined with American capital and market access, can create formidable global competitors. The trust it has painstakingly built—despite setbacks—may ultimately prove more valuable than the $4 billion valuation suggests.