French crypto hardware wallet provider Ledger is considering a New York listing as surging cyberattacks drive record demand for its hardware devices, sending revenues soaring into the triple-digit millions in 2025.
CEO Pascal Gauthier recently told the Financial Times that the company, founded in Paris in 2014, is seeing its best year yet as both individuals and companies rush to protect their digital assets from increasingly sophisticated hackers.
โWeโre being hacked more and more every dayโ… hacking of your bank accounts, of your crypto, and itโs not going to get better next year and the year after that,โ he said.
The boom comes amid a record year for crypto-related thefts. Hackers stole $2.2 billion worth of digital assets in the first half of 2025, surpassing the total for all of 2024. About 23% of these attacks targeted individual wallets, the FT reported, citing Chainalysis.
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Ledger secures $100 billion in Bitcoin
Gauthier said Ledger secures about $100 billion worth of Bitcoin (BTC) for customers, and might further benefit from seasonal spikes during Black Friday and Christmas.
He added that the company is preparing to raise funds next year, either through a private round or a US listing. He added that Ledger is expanding its New York headcount, noting that โmoney is in New York today for crypto, itโs nowhere else in the world, itโs certainly not in Europe.โ
Competitors such as Trezor and Tangem also offer โcold storageโ wallets, but Ledger remains the most prominent name in the market. The company was last valued at $1.5 billion in 2023, backed by 10T Holdings and True Global Ventures.
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Ledgerโs new multisig app sparks backlash
Last month, Ledger launched a new multisignature (multisig) interface, drawing mixed reactions from users. While many praised the upgrade as a solid technical step forward, the new fee structure, including a $10 flat fee per transaction and a 0.05% variable fee for token transfers, triggered criticism from parts of the crypto community.
Developers like pcaversaccio accused the company of straying from its Cypherpunk roots, claiming Ledger is turning its app into a centralized โchoke pointโ to extract revenue from users.
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