Securitize shareholders cleared the final hurdle for the company’s stock market debut on June 29, 2026, voting to approve a business combination with Cantor Equity Partners II.
Key Takeaways:
Securitize shareholders approved a Cantor Equity Partners II merger on June 29, 2026.The deal raises roughly $400 million, including an oversubscribed $225 million PIPE.Securitize Corp. begins trading as SECZ on the NYSE starting July 2, 2026.Most SPAC mergers lose investors at the finish line as shareholders cash out their shares for a refund. Securitize avoided that fate. Less than 30% of Cantor Equity Partners II Class A shares were redeemed, letting the combined company keep roughly 71.5% of the SPAC’s trust account.
A $225 million private investment in public equity, or PIPE, was oversubscribed, a rare outcome for an operating company going public through a SPAC since 2021. Combined with the trust proceeds, Securitize expects to collect about $400 million before transaction costs.
The deal values the company at $1.25 billion on a pre-money basis.
The Securitize executive added:
“We raised an oversubscribed $225M PIPE, the largest of any operating business for a SPAC since 2021, and yesterday we had less than 30% redemptions, so we are going public with over $400M on July 2nd at the NYSE. The next stage in Securitize history starts that day.”
A Company Built on Regulation The Numbers Behind the ListingSecuritize reported $19.5 million in quarterly revenue for the first quarter of 2026, a 39% jump from a year earlier. Asset servicing revenue, tied largely to the growth of BUIDL and similar products, rose 201% to $8.3 million. The company posted a net loss of $7.9 million, driven by one-time costs tied to going public.
Management projects revenue near $110 million for 2026, with about $85 million already under contract or recurring. The company points to a tokenizable asset market it estimates at $10 trillion to $19 trillion over the long term, covering equities, bonds, and alternative investments.
What Comes NextAfter the listing, Securitize plans to tokenize its own shares on its platform, running them alongside standard shares settled through the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation. Investors could choose between traditional T+1 settlement and instant, blockchain-based settlement with potential for 24/7 trading.
The arrangement would make Securitize one of the first U.S. public companies to offer its own stock in both traditional and tokenized form, turning its NYSE listing into a live test of the technology it sells.



















