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2026-01-13 14:45:00| Fast Company

2025 saw several successful public offerings, especially from companies operating in the AI, cryptocurrency, and fintech spaces. What many on Wall Street are anxious to know is whether the IPO marketand its returnswill accelerate in 2026, or if investors will take a more cautious approach to newly public companies as inflationary pressures, the potential for a weakening economy, and a possible AI bubble weigh heavily on peoples minds. The first real test of investor IPO appetite may come later this month, when cryptocurrency custody firm BitGo Holdings, Inc. is expected to go public. Heres what you need to know about BitGos IPO. What is BitGo? BitGo Holdings is a cryptocurrency infrastructure company. One of its main functions is providing cryptocurrency custodial services. Crypto custody companies provide storage and security for digital assets. Such companies are often used by large institutional investors to help manage risk and also meet regulatory guidelines. In contrast, many individual cryptocurrency investors still rely on personalized digital wallets to hold their tokens. BitGo was founded in 2013 and is headquartered in Palo Alto, California. According to the companys S-1 filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, BitGo had 566 full-time employees as of September 30. Over the past 12 months, ending September 30, the company says it generated total revenue of $11.1 billion. Its platform currently supports more than 1,550 assets with a total value of $104 billion.  When is BitGos IPO? BitGo hasnt set a date for its initial public offering yet. In its amended Form S-1 filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) yesterday, the company merely mentioned its intention to go public. However, the amended filing suggests that the public offering will likely happen soon. IPOscoop.com lists BitGos expected IPO date as Thursday, January 22, but BitGo has yet to publicly confirm that date. What is BitGos stock ticker? BitGos shares will trade under the stock ticker BTGO. What market will BitGos shares trade on? BitGo shares will trade on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). What is the IPO share price of BTGO? BitGo hasnt decided on an exact IPO price yet. However, in the companys amended SEC filing, the firm said it expects its shares to be priced at between $15 and $17. How many BTGO shares are available in its IPO? In total, 11,821,595 shares of BTGO Class A common stock will be made available in its IPO. Of those shares, BitGo itself is offering 11 million directly. The remaining shares will be offered by the companys existing shareholders. How much will BitGo raise in its IPO? BitGo will not receive any proceeds from the roughly 821,000 shares its existing shareholders will sell. The company will only benefit from the funds raised from its 11 million share offering. With an expected IPO price of between $15 and $17 per share, BitGo is thus expected to raise between $165 million and $187 million. When you add in the shares being sold by exiting shareholders, BitGos IPO could raise as much as $200 million in total. How much is BitGo worth? BitGos ultimate valuation depends on how much its shares finally list forand how they perform on the stock market.  However, if BTGO shares do indeed IPO at the high-end range of $17 each, BitGo will have a valuation of around $1.96 billion, according to Reuters. BitGo is hoping to repeat 2025s crypto IPO successes If BitGo does IPO this month as expected, it will likely be closely watched as it is not just one of the first tech IPOs of the year, but one of the first operating in the hot (and volatile) cryptocurrency space. Its IPOs success or failure could signal whether investors have a robust appetite for public offerings in 2026, particularly those tied to crypto. In 2025, several companies operating in the cryptocurrency space made successful IPO debuts. These include Circle Internet Groups (NYSE: CRCL) initial public offering in June and Bullishs (NYSE: BLSH) IPO in August.


Category: E-Commerce

 

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2026-01-13 14:43:34| Fast Company

Thousands of New York City nurses were set to return to the picket lines Tuesday as their strike targeting some of the city’s leading hospital systems entered its second day.The walkout, which comes during a severe flu season, involved roughly 15,000 nurses spread out across multiple private hospitals, including NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia, Montefiore Medical Center and Mount Sinai hospital.The affected hospitals have hired droves of temporary nurses to try to fill the labor gap. Both nurses and hospital administrators have urged patients not to avoid getting care during the strike.The labor action comes three years after a similar strike forced medical facilities to transfer some patients and divert ambulances.As with the 2023 labor action, nurses have pointed to staffing issues as a major flashpoint, accusing the big-budget medical centers of refusing to commit to provisions for manageable, safe workloads.The private, nonprofit hospitals involved in the current negotiations say they’ve made strides in staffing in recent years, and have cast the union’s demands as prohibitively expensive.On Monday, the city’s new mayor, Zohran Mamdani, stood beside nurses on a picket line outside NewYork-Presbyterian, praising the union’s members for seeking “dignity, respect and the fair pay and treatment that they deserve.” Associated Press


Category: E-Commerce

 

2026-01-13 14:27:00| Fast Company

By now, the headlines almost write themselves: humanoid robots everywhere, AI in everything. Consumer Electronics Show (CES) 2026 didnt disrupt that narrativeit confirmed it. What changed was the subtext. This was the year AI stopped feeling experimental and started feeling infrastructural. Intelligence has shifted from novelty to baseline, forcing harder questions about consequence, control, and agencynot just what technology can do, but how it reshapes systems once opting out is no longer realistic. For years, progress at CES has been measured in speed, scale, and spectacle. In 2026, a different metric quietly surfaced: judgment. The most advanced products werent the most aggressive or attention-seeking. They were the most considered, designed with an understanding that when intelligence becomes unavoidable, restraint becomes a competitive advantage. Beneath the obvious trends, the Seymourpowell team saw that a recalibration was underway. Trend 1: The Body Is the New Platform Computing has long lived in front of us, on desks, in hands, behind glass. At CES 2026, the more consequential shift was where technology is now choosing to settle: on the body, and within the social rules that already govern it. This wasnt about wearables as accessories. It was about gravitydeciding which parts of the body can host intelligence without demanding attention, breaking etiquette, or forcing users into performative behavior. The real innovation wasnt simply where technology sits, but how interaction becomes quieter, more physical, and often subconscious. Take iPolish, which turned fingernails into a programmable surface. Using digital clip-on nails and a magic wand connected to an app, wearers can shift between hundreds of colors instantly. The move is deceptively simple, but strategically sharp: Nails are already expressive, customizable, and socially accepted. No new behavior is required. Intelligence succeeds here precisely because it inhabits a place culture already allows. [Photo: .lumen] Elsewhere, interaction became even less visible. Naqis neural earbuds bypassed voice and touch entirely, using micro-facial signalsjaw tension and subtle muscle movementsto control devices without overt action. ModeX treated clothing itself as infrastructure, embedding power and compute into garments that dont announce themselves as tech. Orphes sensor-enabled insoles brought lab-grade biomechanics into everyday movement, while .lumens assistive glasses reframed accessibility as scalable augmentation rather than specialist accommodation. [Photo: ModeX] Across categories, the pattern was consistent: the next interface war wont be won by screens. It will be won by technologies that understand where theyre allowed to live, and how quietly theyre expected to behave. The takeaway: As intelligence migrates onto the body, social permission becomes as important as technical capability. The future belongs to products that feel natural not because they disappear, but because they respect the physical and cultural spaces they occupy. Trend 2: Agency Becomes a Design Problem As AI becomes infrastructural, the question is no longer whether systems act autonomouslybut how, when, and on whose behalf. CES 2026 revealed a growing recognition that trust isnt built through capability alone. Its built through boundaries. The most compelling products werent those that automated the most, but those that were explicit about where human judgment still sits. [Photo: Littlebird] Littlebird embodied this shift in the family context, offering predictive safety intelligence without screens, feeds, or surveillance theater. RestroomGuard Savvy applied the same thinking to public infrastructure, proving AI-driven safety doesnt require cameras or biometric intrusion to be effective. Sorcerics Lens extended the idea into the home, replacing dashboards and commands with contextual awareness that responds to situations rather than constant instruction. Even the Descent S1 buoy followed this logic, augmenting diver judgment with shared situational awareness instead of replacing it with alerts or automation. [Photo: UNIUNI Corp.] These systems didnt remove humans from the loop. They clarified where the loop should be. The takeaway: As opting out becomes unrealistic, agency becomes a design material. The most trusted systems wont be the fastest or smartest, but the ones that are clearest about when not to act. Trend 3: Care Moves From Apps to Infrastructure For years, wellness technology has asked individuals to self-optimize: track more, manage better, try harder. CES 2026 suggested a different direction. Care is moving out of dashboards and into systems that actively reduce cognitive, physical, and emotional loadwithout requiring constant attention or self-surveillance. Diligent Robotics Moxi captured this shift clearly. Rather than measuring caregiver performance, the hospital robot removes coordination work altogetherfetching supplies, running errands, and freeing nurses to spend time caring. The value isnt insight. Its relief. Elsewhere, neuro-wellness booths reframed focus and recovery as environmental conditions rather than personal failures to manage. By combining physiological sensing with adaptive lighting, sound, and temperature, they treated mental load as something a space can regulate, not something users must willpower their way through. The same logic appeared in everyday rituals. The AI rejuvenation shower treated water itself as a programmable medium, adjusting minerals and compounds in real time to deliver skincare without screens, tracking, or habit formation. Light Straight addressed a quieter hygiene pain pointmaintenance between reset momentsby cleaning and styling hair without water. It didnt promise transformation. It simply removed friction. [Photo: LOréal Groupe] Care also surfaced in less obvious places. Motion sicknesslong dismissed as an unfortunate side effect of travelwas reframed as a fundamental barrier to autonomous mobility. If passengers cant read, work, watch, or rest without nausea, self-driving cars dont create new freedom, they just extend commute time. Bosch addressed this not through wearables or behavioral coaching, but by redesigning vehicle dynamics at the software level. By controlling motion across all six degrees of freedom, the system reduces sensory conflict before it reaches the body, making it possible for passengers to safely disengage from driving altogether. In this context, motion sickness isnt a comfort issue. Its a gatekeeper. Solve it, and autonomous vehicles become environments for work, rest, and interaction. Ignore it, and adoption stalls. [Photo: Bosch] Across healthcare, mobility, beauty, and the home, the pattern was consistent: Care is no longer a niche vertical or a personal optimization project. Its becoming consumer infrastructure, embedded into environments and systems that quietly do the work for us. The takeaway: Care is no longer about empowerment through information. Its about relief through design. The next generation of care technology wont ask users to try harder, it will redesign the conditions around them. Trend 4: The Physical World Gets Its Software Update While much of the AI conversation still centers on digital products, CES 2026 made something else unmistakable: The biggest bottlenecks in technology are now physical. Infrastructure, energy, logistics, manufacturing, and housing are where intelligence is being stress-tested, not in prototypes, but at scale. This was the year the invisible layer of the tech stack stepped into focus. The Cat Ai Assistant interface on display at the Caterpillar booth during the 2026 CES event in Las Vegas on January 7. [Photo: Bridget Bennett/Bloomberg via Getty Images] Caterpillars keynote crystallized this shift. By embedding AI, autonomy, and edge intelligence directly into fleets, worksites, and heavy machinery, the company reframed physical infrastructure as something that can sense, learn, and adapt in real time. Not flashy. Mission-critical. The same logic appeared elsewhere. The AI Transformer Home Trailer treated housing as adaptive infrastructure rather than a fixed object, physically reconfiguring space on demand. Alpon X5 made enterprise-grade AI deployable at the edge, without cloud dependence, reframing intelligence as something that lives where work actuall happens. Perovskite color-conversion films pushed display progress not through software, but materials scienceanother reminder that some of the biggest leaps ahead wont come from code alone. CES 2026 wasnt just about smarter products. It was about making the physical world programmable. The takeaway: The next phase of AI growth wont be constrained by models, it will be constrained by matter. The companies that win wont just scale intelligence. Theyll modernize the physical systems it depends on. Trend 5: Restraint Becomes a Feature Perhaps the most telling shift at CES 2026 wasnt technological at all. It was tonal. After years of maximalismmore sensors, more screens, more AIa quieter maturity is setting in. The most confident products no longer feel the need to prove intelligence. They demonstrate judgment. Birdfy Hum Bloom used AI not to capture attention, but to slow it down, turning backyard observation into discovery rather than content. Toniebox 2 doubled down on screen-free interaction, resisting dopamine loops in favor of presence and routine. Even Legos Smart Play experiments pointed toward intelligence that scaffolds creativity rather than directing it. This wasnt visible fatigue so much as visible discernment. Companies are beginning to understand that adding intelligence everywhere isnt innovation. Knowing where not to add it is. The takeaway: In a world where intelligence is cheap and ubiquitous, restraint becomes premium. The most advanced products of the next decade may be the ones that know when to step back. CES 2026 didnt deliver a single, dominant narrative, and that may be its most honest reflection of where we are. AI is no longer a question mark. Its a condition. And once intelligence becomes unavoidable, progress is no longer about acceleration. Its about alignment between systems and people, automation and agency, capability and consequence. The future on display wasnt louder or faster. It was more deliberate. And that, quietly, may be the most meaningful shift of all.


Category: E-Commerce

 

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