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From Early Michael Saylor Bet to Billions in Deals: How Jefferies Became a Crypto Powerhouse

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It all started in 2019, when a relatively small software company called MicroStrategy (now known as Strategy) knocked on investment bank Jefferies’ door after being turned away by Wall Street giants.

At the time, Michael Saylor’s firm had a market cap of nearly $2 billion and was looking to raise capital to buy bitcoin—something bulge bracket banks were reluctant to support.

Jefferies took a chance on Saylor, marking a pivotal deal for the investment bank and the digital assets sector.

Now, Saylor’s firm is worth about $111 billion in market cap, other companies are buying bitcoin for their balance sheets, and large Wall Street firms are piling into the digital assets sector.

And Jefferies? The firm is now a full-service investment bank for the crypto and blockchain space, and it’s doing billions in deals without the crutch of a trillion-dollar balance sheet or FDIC-insured deposits.

“We don’t change our stripes too often, but when we see opportunity, we move fast,” Alexander Yavorsky, head of FIG investment banking at Jefferies, told CoinDesk in an interview.

The crypto commitment

The game-changing MicroStrategy engagement in 2019 kickstarted a much deeper foray into the asset class for Jefferies.

By 2020, Jefferies had become the first major full-service investment bank to dedicate a senior banker exclusively to crypto. Tim O’Shea, now co-head of digital assets coverage, spends 100% of his time on the asset class.

But don’t call them a crypto shop as Jefferies has been consistently doing deals across the board, putting the firm sixth globally in the last twelve months, according to data from Dealogic.

Diving deeper into deals that Jefferies worked on, the firm revealed that it has advised on 120 transactions with over $150 billion of deal value across fintech, market structure, and exchanges since 2015.

This track record, particularly handling deals that involve applied technology and complex regulatory footprints, uniquely equipped Jefferies to handle the hybrid world where crypto meets traditional finance.

“We are a full-service investment banking firm, rather than a crypto shop,” Yavorsky said, «but we’ve built deep sector knowledge, and we know how to structure deals and move quickly.»

Over the past three years, Jefferies has steadily increased its involvement in crypto and crypto-adjacent dealmaking, building a track record across capital markets, M&A, and restructuring.

One of the standout deals the firm advised was NinjaTrader on its $1.5 billion acquisition by Kraken, a notable example of consolidation between traditional trading platforms and digital asset exchanges.

The Jefferies team brings the «incredible expertise and talent required to advise on transactions of this size, they are incredibly dialed into the crypto and capital markets universes,» Martin Franchi, CEO of NinjaTrader, told CoinDesk in an email statement.

«Understanding the needs of folks in the space were native to how they think and in our case, helped bring together the worlds of TradFi and DeFi for a highly strategic deal that benefits not only both firms, but also our customers,” Franchi added.

Navigating complex world of crypto

What really set Jefferies apart is that the investment bank didn’t just stick to the usual deal-making advisory for the industry. With an industry as dynamic as crypto, the bank stayed nimble to take on a much more complex mandate.

It played a key role in one of the industry’s most high-profile collapses, serving as adviser to the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors in the FTX bankruptcy, where it worked to help recover value for stakeholders.

Meanwhile, the bank continued supporting traditional financial institutions that entered the crypto space.

It advised J.C. Flowers on its investment in LMAX, and worked with Victory Park Capital on the SPAC merger with Bakkt.

Beyond advisory roles, Jefferies has executed capital raises for major players like Galaxy Digital (GLXY) and DRW, and has been active in the crypto mining sector through multiple fundraising and advisory engagements.

The firm has also provided strategic advice on a range of crypto exchange transactions, reflecting its broader involvement in infrastructure and market structure developments within digital assets.

A growing influence

Though not a crypto-exclusive investment bank, Jefferies’ activity in the sector points to a growing comfort with the complexities of digital asset finance, and a willingness to engage where traditional firms have often hesitated.

With the lines between centralized and decentralized finance continuing to blur, and infrastructure firms increasingly in M&A crosshairs, Jefferies looks poised to remain one of the most active and experienced investment banks in the digital asset space.

Read more: Bitcoin Mining Profitability Down 7.4% in March as Prices, Transaction Fees Fell: Jefferies

Disclaimer: Parts of this article were generated with the assistance from AI tools and reviewed by our editorial team to ensure accuracy and adherence to our standards. For more information, see CoinDesk’s full AI Policy.

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Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong Invites Ex-DOGE Staff to Join Crypto Exchange

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Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong is offering a new home for staffers departing the U.S. government’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).

On social media, Armstrong encouraged former DOGE operatives to apply for roles at the crypto exchange through a fast-track hiring process.

The move came after a Fox News clip featuring Ethan Shaotran, a 22-year-old former DOGE staffer and Harvard dropout, who said his work with DOGE cost him friendships and status on campus. Shaotran praised the team’s mission and work ethic, describing their late-night dedication to trimming bureaucratic waste.

“If you are looking for your next mission after serving your country, consider helping create a more efficient financial system for the world at Coinbase,” Armstrong wrote in a post on X, attaching a job application form aimed at former DOGE employees.

DOGE, launched under President Donald Trump’s administration and led by Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy, was created to streamline federal operations. The agency said it has saved $170 billion through asset sales, contract and lease cancelations, workforce reductions and more.

Coinbase’s embrace of former DOGE staff comes after Armstrong publicly supported the idea of DOGE and called for the end of the income tax.

Coinbase spent over $70 million in 2024 supporting crypto-friendly political action committees and recently added Trump campaign co-manager Chris LaCivita to its advisory board. The company’s shares have recently jumped over news they are being included in the S&P 500 index.

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CoinDesk 20 Performance Update: Uniswap (UNI) Drops 6.8% as Index Declines

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CoinDesk Indices presents its daily market update, highlighting the performance of leaders and laggards in the CoinDesk 20 Index.

The CoinDesk 20 is currently trading at 3335.09, down 1.0% (-34.87) since 4 p.m. ET on Tuesday.

One of 20 assets is trading higher.

9am CoinDesk 20 Update for 2025-05-14: full chart

Leaders: XRP (+0.9%) and AVAX (-0.1%).

Laggards: UNI (-6.8%) and APT (-4.6%).

The CoinDesk 20 is a broad-based index traded on multiple platforms in several regions globally.

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Surge in XRP, Dogecoin Futures Bets Signals Speculative Froth

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Speculative bets are piling into XRP and dogecoin (DOGE) futures even as spot prices show signs of losing momentum, signaling rising appetite for volatility and downside risk.

In the past week, DOGE futures open interest surged from $989 million to $1.62 billion, a 63.9% jump, according to data from on-chain analytics firm Glassnode. DOGE is up nearly 40% in the past week and trades just over 23 cents on Wednesday.

“This decoupling suggests persistent speculative positioning, even as price momentum fades — a setup worth monitoring,” Glassnode noted in an X post late Tuesday.

A similar trend is playing out in XRP, where open interest rose by over $1 billion, or a 41.6% increase over the same period. Unlike DOGE, XRP has seen relatively lower spot gains, rising from around $2.14 to $2.6 in the past week.

Both cases indicate a broader uptick in derivatives-fueled speculation, particularly in high-beta assets. When open interest rises alongside (or in the absence of) price action, it often reflects traders positioning aggressively for upside.

However, this sets the stage for sharper liquidations if sentiment flips, leading to hundreds of millions wiped out in hours as a liquidation event earlier this week showed.

Open interest tracks the total value of outstanding futures contracts and is widely used as a proxy for speculative activity. When paired with flat or fading price action, rising OI can signal that leverage is outpacing conviction — a pattern that has preceded flash crashes in the past.

Earlier this year, DOGE futures set record highs as some traders speculated on a $1 DOGE in 2025. That narrative has cooled, but the current surge in futures bets indicates that memecoin and XRP exposure remains high-risk, high-reward territory.

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