Crypto Trading Platform Aurox Takes First Outside Money in Advance of Public Offering


    • Aurox plans to go public in the fourth quarter, though a listing could happen sooner
    • The company did not sell any of its tokens as part of the deal

    Trading platform Aurox has taken in outside capital for the first time as the company prepares to go public later this year.

    Aurox raised a $5 million seed round at a post-money valuation of $25 million, CEO Giorgi Khazaradze told Blockworks. The valuation is intentionally low, Khazaradze said, to make room for additional venture funding and to demonstrate growth before an initial public offering.

    Deborah Braun and Brett Rosen of investment firm RB Capital participated in the round, with other backers including a number of high-net worth individuals.

    Giorgi Khazaradze
    Giorgi Khazaradze

    The plan is to raise “another round and potentially another few rounds” before becoming a public company, Khazaradze said. 

    “The initial traction of us going public always revolved around this deal,” Khazaradze said.

    Aurox offers its spin on a Bloomberg trading terminal for crypto, including support for decentralized finance (DeFi) — taking a cut of every trade executed via smart contracts. The company additionally oversees its own token, URUS, and did not sell any tokens in the fundraise.

    Because Khazaradze and other executives own shares with so-called super-voting powers — with a 10-to-1 ratio — Aurox’s existing ownership is set to maintain control of the company.

    The trading platform is slated to go public in the fourth quarter of this year, though that could happen earlier. All options for doing so are on the table, including a traditional initial public offering (IPO), merging with a special purpose acquisition company, undergoing a reverse merger or listing directly.

    Khazaradze declined to comment on the most likely outcome, though he said “there’s definitely a winning route” that is awaiting legal signoff.

    The funds are slated to fuel the company’s hiring for product roles, release new products and cover the costs of a listing later this year.

    “Now that we have the initial money, we can be selective as to who we raise money from,” he said.


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    • Michael Bodley

      Managing Editor

      Michael Bodley is a New York-based managing editor for Blockworks, where he focuses on the intersection of Wall Street and digital assets. He previously worked for the institutional investor newsletter Hedge Fund Alert. His work has been published in The Boston Globe, NBC News, The San Francisco Chronicle and The Washington Post.

      Contact Michael via email at [email protected]



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