CoinList Relaunches With Compliance-First Playbook and Three New Sales
After a two-year period of dormancy following its 2023 enforcement settlement, CoinList is back with a significantly narrower product scope and a renewed institutional desk.

CoinList, the token sale platform that effectively defined the structured ICO of the 2020-2021 era, is back. After a two-year period of dormancy following its 2023 settlement with the SEC over Kazakhstan sanctions compliance, the company on Monday announced the relaunch of its primary markets platform, with three inaugural sales scheduled for April and May. The new product posture is narrower, more compliance-heavy, and explicitly institutional in orientation.
The new shape
The relaunched platform limits participation to accredited investors (U.S.) and professional investors (non-U.S.) as defined under applicable regulatory regimes. That alone removes the retail access that characterized CoinList's previous era. The platform has also narrowed its geographic coverage, excluding a list of jurisdictions that runs to 27 countries — substantially longer than the company's prior 2022-era list.
"We were, for a period, operating as though the rules we assumed would eventually be written were already in force. They weren't. We've adjusted." — Graham Jenkin, CoinList CEO
The inaugural sales
The three projects CoinList is launching with are:
- Chronos, a time-series data oracle for DeFi derivatives
- Meridian, a tokenized commodities infrastructure project
- Orbit Protocol, a satellite data marketplace for insurance underwriters
All three have been in private development for at least 18 months, have audited smart contracts, and are conducting sales under Regulation D 506(c) in the United States with parallel qualified-investor pathways elsewhere. The aggregate raise across the three is approximately $90 million, well below the scale CoinList operated at during its peak.
The competitive position
CoinList's competitive position in the current environment is more challenging than in its previous era. Decentralized launchpads on Solana, Ethereum, and Cosmos have absorbed a meaningful share of retail-accessible token sale activity. Regulated private placement platforms — including platforms run by Securitize, Republic, and Fidelity's digital asset arm — have taken much of the institutional flow. CoinList is, in effect, re-entering a market where its prior niches have been filled.
The bet the company is making, according to people familiar with its strategy, is that the next 18 months will see a consolidation of token sale activity around fewer, more compliance-serious venues. If that is correct, CoinList's substantial operational and licensing investment — the company is registered as a broker-dealer, an ATS, and a money transmitter in 47 U.S. states — is meaningful moat. If it is incorrect, the relaunch is premature.
Either way, the return of a recognizable primary markets brand — after a cycle in which many of the 2017 and 2021-era platforms have simply disappeared — is an information signal about where the market believes regulated token sales are headed.
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