Key Highlights
- Following a $1.2 billion SPAC transaction, CoinShares now trades on Nasdaq under CSHR, bringing its $6B+ digital asset management platform to U.S. investors.
- The transaction created CoinShares PLC as the new parent company, backed by $50 million in institutional capital commitments.
- The firm operates 39 investment funds spanning four distinct platforms and controls 34% of Europe’s cryptocurrency ETP marketplace.
- Crypto valuations have plummeted more than 50% since the initial SPAC announcement in September, with CoinShares’ Bitcoin Mining ETF (WGMI) declining over 22% in half a year.
- Research from Bernstein suggests crypto equities may be establishing a price floor as Q1 earnings reports approach.
CoinShares has officially landed in American capital markets, though market conditions have deteriorated considerably since the transaction was initially unveiled.
CoinShares International Limited, CS.ST
The European digital asset management firm finalized its combination with Vine Hill Capital Investment Corp. this Wednesday, establishing CoinShares PLC as the successor entity. Trading commenced on the Nasdaq exchange under CSHR, representing the company’s inaugural presence in U.S. equity markets.
The transaction assigns CoinShares an enterprise value approaching $1.2 billion. Accompanying the deal is a $50 million institutional investment commitment — signaling investor support even amid challenging conditions for cryptocurrency-related assets.
CoinShares previously traded on European exchanges before this American listing. The Nasdaq launch serves primarily to enhance visibility, capture U.S. institutional investment flows, and expand research analyst coverage.
The firm oversees more than $6 billion across 39 distinct investment products distributed on four separate investment platforms. Revenue generation primarily derives from recurring asset management fees, creating what management describes as predictable profitability and positive free cash flow characteristics.
CoinShares commands a 34% share of the European crypto exchange-traded product sector — a leadership position the firm intends to leverage for U.S. market expansion through both organic product launches and strategic acquisitions.
CEO Jean-Marie Mognetti emphasized the company’s expansion strategy. “We are diversifying both our product and revenue mix, including new capabilities in listed asset management, active alternative strategies, and decentralized finance,” he stated.
Market Conditions Have Shifted Dramatically
The market environment, unfortunately, has become considerably more challenging. When the SPAC combination was initially revealed in September, cryptocurrency markets exhibited substantially different dynamics.
Since that announcement, aggregate crypto market capitalization has contracted by more than half. An industry-wide deleveraging event on October 10 intensified the downturn throughout the sector.
CoinShares’ proprietary Bitcoin Mining ETF, trading as WGMI, has experienced losses exceeding 22% across the previous six-month period, based on Yahoo Finance tracking.
Cryptocurrency-exposed equities have suffered widespread declines. Coinbase, Gemini, and Figure Technologies have all posted significant year-to-date losses. Circle represents a notable outlier, benefiting from sustained expansion in stablecoin adoption.
Analyst Perspectives on Market Bottom
Bernstein’s research team recently suggested the downturn may be nearing completion. Their analysis indicates crypto-related equities could be forming a valuation floor as companies prepare to report first-quarter results — though those earnings are anticipated to reflect weak operational performance.
CoinShares becomes the latest digital asset company to access public markets, joining BitGo (BTGO), Circle (CRCL), Bullish (BLSH), and Gemini (GEMI). BitGo completed its public listing earlier in this calendar year.
The firm’s enhanced access to U.S. regulatory authorities is viewed as strategically beneficial as compliance frameworks for digital assets continue developing.
CoinShares’ WGMI ETF is down more than 22% over the past six months.



