KDDI Coincheck deal expands Japan crypto access
Japan telecom KDDI has agreed to buy a 14.9% stake in KDDI Coincheck Group for $65 million.
- KDDI will subscribe for 28.5 million newly issued Coincheck Group shares at $2.28 each for a total of $65 million, with the deal closing in June.
- The business alliance covers customer referrals, revenue sharing, and joint initiatives aimed at broadening crypto access across KDDI’s 72 million mobile subscribers.
- KDDI gains the right to nominate one non-executive director to Coincheck’s board at its next AGM, expected in September 2026.
KDDI Corporation (TYO: 9433), Japan’s second-largest telecom company with over 72 million mobile subscribers, has announced an agreement to acquire a 14.9% stake in Nasdaq-listed Coincheck Group for $65 million. KDDI will subscribe for 28,536,516 newly issued shares at $2.28 each, with the transaction expected to close in June 2026.
Alongside the investment, Coincheck’s Japanese subsidiary and KDDI signed a business alliance agreement covering customer referrals, revenue sharing, and joint initiatives to expand crypto adoption across KDDI’s consumer channels. Coincheck Group shares rose 25% on the news.
What the partnership delivers
Coincheck Group CEO Pascal St-Jean said the deal reflects where the industry is headed. “Institutions of KDDI’s stature are no longer asking whether to engage, but who they can trust to engage with at a large scale,” he said.
KDDI gains the right to nominate one non-executive director to Coincheck’s board at its next annual general meeting, expected in September. The deal values Coincheck at approximately $437 million on a post-money basis. J.P. Morgan advised Coincheck on the transaction.
KDDI has been building its Web3 presence since 2023, launching αU, a metaverse and Web3 service that includes an NFT marketplace and crypto wallet. Japan’s broader regulatory environment has also shifted in Coincheck’s favour, with a flat 20% crypto tax taking effect in 2026 and expected to increase retail participation in regulated exchanges.
Context: Japan’s digital asset landscape
Coincheck is one of Japan’s largest regulated crypto exchanges offering trading, custody, staking, and asset management services. Its Amsterdam-listed parent completed the acquisition of Canadian digital asset manager 3iQ in February 2026.
The Bank of Japan has separately described blockchain as entering an implementation phase, with institutional deployments accelerating across the country.
Japan’s FSA-regulated environment means all major crypto exchanges must maintain strict reserve and reporting standards, which has shaped the market toward a small number of well-capitalised, compliant platforms.
The KDDI deal reinforces that institutional players are choosing to partner with those regulated operators rather than build competing infrastructure from scratch.