Crypto World
Warsh Confirmation May Shape Crypto Regulation
The US Senate advanced Kevin Warsh toward the upper echelons of monetary policy, approving him as a Federal Reserve governor in a narrow 51-45 vote that crossed party lines with a single Democratic deviation. The confirmation sets the stage for a separate vote on Warsh’s potential appointment as chair, a decision that could reshape the central bank’s policy trajectory at a time of heightened scrutiny over rate moves and institutional independence.
Following the confirmation, the chamber moved to invoke cloture on Warsh’s nomination as Fed chair, signaling an expedited path to a final vote. If confirmed as chair, Warsh would inherit leadership duties as Jerome Powell’s term as chair nears its end. Powell’s chairmanship would persist in a governor capacity until 2028, while Warsh’s selection for the chair role would mark a substantial shift in the central bank’s operating tone and policy signaling.
Warsh was confirmed as a Fed governor for a 14-year term and has previously served in the post from 2006 to 2011 under Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama. The leadership reshuffle comes amid expectations and concerns about how the chair’s independence from the White House policy agenda would be preserved as monetary policy evolves in response to inflation, growth, and financial stability considerations.
As coverage of the nomination circulated, analysts noted that the leadership transition could influence market perceptions of future interest-rate trajectories and the Fed’s autonomy. “The shakeup in the leadership of the US central bank has the potential to move markets” as observers weigh policy signals and the balance of power within the institution.
Related coverage: the Federal Reserve chair nominee’s disclosure includes crypto and AI holdings.
Warsh has publicly commented on digital assets. In a 2025 interview, he described Bitcoin as a “transformative” technology and an important asset that can inform policymakers. During the Senate Banking Committee confirmation hearing, however, several Democratic members pressed questions about whether he could maintain independence from the president’s policy agenda if he ascended to the chair role.
Key takeaways
- Senate confirmation of Kevin Warsh as a Federal Reserve governor, by a 51-45 vote with a notable deviation, clears the path toward a potential chair nomination.
- A separate vote on Warsh’s appointment as Fed chair is expected to follow, shaping the Fed’s policy leadership for the next several years.
- The leadership transition arises amid ongoing discussions about the Fed’s independence and how policy will respond to evolving macro conditions.
- Regulatory momentum in the crypto space continues with a markup on a digital-asset market-structure bill (CLARITY), signaling a potential overhaul of oversight for digital assets and stablecoins.
Federal Reserve leadership and the policy independence question
Warsh’s prior tenure as a Fed governor (2006–2011) and his public statements on monetary policy provide a basis for expectations about his approach to chair duties. The confirmation process featured scrutiny from lawmakers concerned about ensuring the Fed’s independence from political influence, particularly in a period of heightened political rhetoric around inflation control and macroeconomic management. The question of independence remains central to debates over how the Fed will navigate interest-rate policy, financial stability, and the integration of evolving technology into central-bank decision-making.
Powell’s term as chair is reportedly concluding in the near term, with the possibility of a transition that could influence committee dynamics, policy signaling, and the tempo at which rate adjustments are communicated to markets. The broader market environment—characterized by inflation dynamics, labor market resilience, and financial-market stability—will interact with any changes in the leadership cadre at the Fed. Analysts note that leadership style and policy signaling can have tangible implications for banks, asset managers, and crypto firms as they navigate regulatory expectations and liquidity considerations.
Regulatory momentum in the crypto space: CLARITY and market-structure considerations
Concurrently with the confirmation process, the U.S. Senate Banking Committee advanced its approach to digital-asset regulation through the markup of a market-structure bill branded as CLARITY (Digital Asset Market Clarity Act). The committee released the text of its version of the bill, which includes a compromise on stablecoin yield—one of the long-standing points of contention among participants across the crypto industry and traditional banking circles.
On Thursday, the committee planned to markup CLARITY, potentially setting the stage for a floor vote in the full Senate. The evolving framework seeks to clarify oversight and regulatory responsibilities for digital assets, with implications for exchanges, wallet providers, and financial institutions that interact with crypto products. While the precise contours of the act are subject to amendment, the markup signals ongoing congressional engagement with digital-asset regulation beyond existing guidance from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), and other agencies.
From a compliance perspective, the reform landscape continues to emphasize robust AML/KYC standards, licensing requirements for crypto entities, and cross-border regulatory alignment. For institutions with banking relationships or custody operations, the CLARITY process underscores the need for attestation of policy compliance, risk controls, and governance processes that can support safe handling of crypto exposures amid evolving market structures and settlement frameworks.
Analysts and industry participants may view CLARITY as a barometer of U.S. regulatory clarity in the digital-asset domain, set against a broader global context that includes parallel regulatory initiatives in other jurisdictions. The outcome of the CLARITY markup could influence the pace at which crypto firms pursue licensing, product development, and institutional partnerships with banks and payment networks.
Institutional and compliance implications
For banks, brokers-dealers, and custody providers, the leadership transition at the Fed combined with a potential shift in digital-asset regulation creates a period of regulatory alignment and risk adjustment. Financial institutions may monitor how a changed Fed stance on inflation and growth interacts with the evolving regulatory framework for crypto assets, including capital and liquidity considerations, risk-weighting approaches, and disclosure expectations. Compliance teams should anticipate periodic updates to supervisory expectations, with particular attention to liquidity management, custody controls, and verification of crypto-related disclosures in financial reporting and governance materials.
Market participants should also assess the cross-border implications—especially in a regulatory ecosystem where MiCA and other global regimes shape the operating environment for stablecoins, tokenized assets, and cross-border settlements. While the CLARITY markup represents a U.S.-centric effort to codify market-structure and supervisory oversight, global firms operating in multiple jurisdictions will need to reconcile U.S. policy changes with international standards and enforcement expectations across borders.
Closing perspective
As the political and regulatory landscape unfolds, the convergence of a Fed leadership transition and crypto-regulatory reform highlights the increasing centrality of policy design to market structure and compliance risk. The coming weeks will reveal whether Warsh’s chair nomination gains bipartisan alignment and how the CLARITY process shapes the regulatory runway for digital assets. Stakeholders—from exchanges to banks and institutional investors—should monitor not only rate-path guidance but also the evolution of oversight, licensing, and risk-management requirements that will define the next phase of the crypto economy’s integration into mainstream financial markets.
Crypto World
BeInCrypto Institutional Research: 15 Digital Asset Managers Leading Institutional Investment
Best Digital Asset Manager is a category within the BeInCrypto Institutional 100, an annual research-driven program recognising institutional digital asset excellence across 26 categories and six pillars.
This category sits under Pillar 2: Capital Markets & Infrastructure. The 15 firms below are listed alphabetically and are not ranked. A shortlist will be named in May 2026, with the winner announced at Proof of Talk in Paris on June 2–3, 2026.
Key Facts
- Long list: 15 firms across ETF issuers, tokenized fund operators, multi-jurisdiction ETP managers, crypto-native hedge funds, and public-market crypto exposure vehicles
- Initial pool: More than 30 firms screened; 15 advanced to the long list
- Scoring: 30% quantitative data · 50% Expert Council · 20% disclosed company data
- Criteria assessed: AUM, product breadth, regulatory status, distribution reach, tokenization and staking integration, fee competitiveness, institutional adoption, track record, reputation
- Data sources: SEC EDGAR, ETF flow trackers, issuer disclosures, VARA, FCA, FINMA, BaFin, MAS, MiCA-CASP registers, audited reports, PitchBook, Tracxn, and Crunchbase
| Firm | Asset Manager Sub-Segment | HQ | Reach | Top Product / Listing | Representative Work |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 21Shares | Crypto ETP issuer | Zurich / New York | $11B+ AUM 55 listed products |
ARK 21Shares Bitcoin ETF (ARKB) Multi-jurisdiction ETP suite |
Acquired by FalconX in Nov 2025 ARKB live on NYSE Arca since Jan 2024 |
| BitMine Immersion Technologies | Public ETH treasury vehicle | Norwalk, CT, USA | 5.21M ETH $13.4B total holdings |
NYSE: BMNR MAVAN validator network |
Uplisted to NYSE in Apr 2026 Chaired by Tom Lee of Fundstrat |
| Bitwise Asset Management | US ETF + European ETP manager | San Francisco, USA | $4.5B+ combined AUM post-ETC Group US and European product footprint |
Bitwise Bitcoin ETF (BITB) BTCE physical Bitcoin ETP |
Acquired ETC Group in Aug 2024 European ETPs rebranded in Jan 2025 |
| BlackRock | ETF + tokenized fund manager | New York, USA | $12.5T+ AUM IBIT ~$80B+ AUM |
IBIT, ETHA, ETHB BUIDL tokenized money market fund |
IBIT became the fastest ETF to cross $80B 600+ institutional holders disclosed |
| CoinShares | European crypto ETP manager | St Helier, Jersey | $6B AUM 39 products |
Nasdaq: CSHR XBT Provider ETPs |
Listed on Nasdaq via $1.2B SPAC in Apr 2026 Operates a broad European ETP platform |
| Fidelity Investments | Vertically integrated asset manager | Boston, USA | $15T+ AUA platform FBTC $15B–$18B AUM |
Fidelity Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund (FBTC) FETH Ethereum fund |
Fidelity Digital Assets received OCC conditional charter Combines asset management with custody infrastructure |
| Franklin Templeton | ETF + tokenized fund manager | San Mateo, USA | $1.7T+ AUM BENJI deployed across 8+ chains |
EZBC, EZET FOBXX / BENJI tokenized money market fund |
Multi-chain tokenized money market fund pioneer Built digital asset products across ETFs and tokenized funds |
| Grayscale Investments | Legacy crypto asset manager | Stamford, CT, USA | $20B+ combined AUM GBTC and BTC mini products |
GBTC, BTC, ETHE, ETH, DEFG Single-asset crypto trusts |
Pioneered legacy trust-to-spot ETF conversions SOL and XRP filings remain pending |
| Hashdex | Multi-jurisdiction crypto index manager | Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | Brazil, US, EU, and Switzerland footprint Index-based product structure |
Hashdex Nasdaq Crypto Index US ETF DEFI product suite |
Brazilian-origin manager expanding globally Known for crypto index methodology |
| Invesco | Major asset manager with Galaxy JV | Atlanta, GA, USA | $1.8T+ AUM Galaxy-backed crypto product support |
Invesco Galaxy Bitcoin ETF (BTCO) Joint venture with Galaxy Digital |
Galaxy provides crypto trading and custody integration Extends Invesco’s ETF platform into digital assets |
| Nine Blocks Capital Management | Crypto-native hedge fund | Dubai, UAE | $180M+ AUM in USD fund AIMA member |
First VARA-licensed crypto hedge fund Market-neutral multi-strategy |
17%+ annualised returns since June 2021 Sharpe ratio above 2.1 |
| ProShares | Futures ETF + structured products issuer | Bethesda, MD, USA | Established ETF issuer Structured product depth |
BITO, BITI, EETH Futures-based crypto ETFs |
Launched first US Bitcoin futures ETF in 2021 BITO retains material AUM despite spot ETF competition |
| Purpose Investments | Spot crypto ETF pioneer | Toronto, Canada | Multi-crypto product range Toronto Stock Exchange listings |
Purpose Bitcoin ETF (BTCC) ETHH Ethereum product |
Launched the world’s first spot Bitcoin ETF in 2021 Entered spot crypto ETFs three years before US launch |
| VanEck | ETF, ETP, and digital asset equity manager | New York, USA | $110B+ total AUM US and European product footprint |
VanEck Bitcoin Trust (HODL) ETHV and DAM ETF |
Runs digital asset ETFs and mining equity exposure Maintains strong research and index framework |
| WisdomTree | Multi-jurisdiction ETP + tokenized funds | New York, USA | $100B+ AUM US and European distribution |
WisdomTree Bitcoin Fund (BTCW) WisdomTree Prime and WTSYX |
Operates crypto ETP suite across jurisdictions Built tokenized fund access through WisdomTree Prime |
About This List
The BeInCrypto Institutional 100 — Best Digital Asset Manager (2026 Long List) identifies firms running regulated institutional digital asset investment products, including spot ETFs, ETPs, tokenized money market funds, index funds, structured products, and public-market crypto exposure vehicles.
The category includes traditional asset managers expanding into crypto, dedicated crypto ETP issuers, multi-jurisdiction index providers, and selected edge-case inclusions such as public-market crypto treasury vehicles and regulated crypto hedge funds where the asset management surface is institutionally relevant.
Methodology
This category is evaluated under Track B of the BeInCrypto Institutional 100 methodology: 30% quantitative metrics, 50% Expert Council scoring, and 20% disclosed company data.
Assessment spans eight criteria: assets under management, product breadth, regulatory status, distribution reach, innovation through tokenization or staking integration, fee competitiveness, institutional adoption, and track record and reputation.
Data was verified using SEC EDGAR filings, ETF flow trackers including Farside and SoSoValue, issuer disclosures, regulatory registers including VARA, FCA, FINMA, BaFin, MAS and MiCA-CASP, audited reports, and private-market sources including PitchBook, Tracxn, and Crunchbase.
The post BeInCrypto Institutional Research: 15 Digital Asset Managers Leading Institutional Investment appeared first on BeInCrypto.
Crypto World
Bitcoin’s $80K Rally Raises Questions About Sustainability, Wintermute Says
TLDR:
- Bitcoin surpassed $80,000 for the first time since January, briefly reaching $83K before pulling back slightly.
- Open interest surged from $48B to $58B while spot volumes hit two-year lows, signaling leverage-driven movement.
- Bitcoin ETF inflows added $623M, with Morgan Stanley’s new BTC ETF pulling $194M in its debut month alone.
- Tuesday’s CPI print and the Fed chair transition from Powell to Warsh are the next key macro triggers to watch.
Bitcoin’s return above $80,000 has drawn attention from market analysts, with trading firm Wintermute raising concerns about what is driving the move.
While the price milestone marks the first time BTC has traded at this level since January, Wintermute warns that the rally may not be as solid as it appears on the surface.
Short Squeeze Mechanics Behind Bitcoin’s Price Move
Bitcoin climbed to approximately $83,000 last week, breaking above its 200-day moving average for the first time in seven months.
The move coincided with a broader equity rally, with the Nasdaq gaining 4.5% and the S&P 500 rising 2.3% to fresh all-time highs. U.S. nonfarm payrolls also beat expectations, coming in at 115,000 against a consensus of 65,000.
Wintermute, however, pointed to the mechanics behind BTC’s price action as a reason for caution. Open interest in Bitcoin futures jumped from $48 billion to $58 billion over the past month. At the same time, spot trading volumes fell to two-year lows.
The firm noted on X: “BTC ground above $70k, nobody believed it, shorts piled in, got liquidated, and had to be covered by buying.” That dynamic, rather than fresh demand, appears to be what pushed prices higher.
Funding rates remain predominantly short, which means additional squeeze pressure could still push prices up. That said, Wintermute was clear that forced covering is not the same as genuine market conviction.
Institutional Flows Offer a More Constructive Long-Term View
Despite the short-term concerns, longer-term indicators tell a different story. Bitcoin ETF flows added $623 million during the period, and Morgan Stanley’s new BTC ETF pulled in $194 million in its first month without a single day of outflows. Exchange reserves remain at seven-year lows, pointing to steady accumulation by long-term holders.
Wintermute noted that whale accumulation and ETF inflows continue to absorb supply at current levels. However, the firm also observed that the institutional bid tends to reduce in size as prices move higher, which limits upside pressure over time.
The near-term focus now turns to macroeconomic events. Tuesday’s CPI release will offer the first clear look at how energy prices have fed into inflation.
Additionally, Federal Reserve Chair Powell’s term ends Thursday, with Kevin Warsh’s confirmation expected to follow.
Wintermute stated that if Bitcoin holds above $80,000 through a macro shock, that would serve as genuine confirmation of a trend change.
A selloff in line with equities, however, would suggest the short squeeze was the primary driver all along. RSI is currently entering overbought territory, and spot demand needs to step in for the rally to hold.
Crypto World
Bitcoin Price Analysis: BTC Maintains Key Support Levels, Will the Rebound Continue?
Bitcoin is trading at $80.8k, consolidating just above the $80k psychologcial threshold that defined the ceiling of this cycle’s correction for months. While the ascending channel’s higher boundary is still holding, the 100-day MA has been left well behind, and the price’s reaction to the current area where the 200-day MA is also converging will likely shape the crypto market trend in the upcoming weeks.
Bitcoin Price Analysis: The Daily Chart
On the daily timeframe, the market is once again testing the ascending channel’s upper trendline, which is also accompanied by the 200-day moving average around the $82k area. Below, the 100-day moving average is now flattening near $72k, which can be a significant signal for a mid-term bullish market structure shift. The asset is currently consolidating just below the channel’s upper boundary and the 200-day MA, while the RSI is holding in the 60–65 range after retracing from nearly overbought levels twice.
The $76k support zone created by a bullish order block at the base of the recent price push is the first level to defend on any pullback, while the ascending channel’s upper boundary and the 200-day MA just above it near the $80k–$82k area provide additional dynamic resistance above the current market price.
A daily close above this zone would be the single most significant structural development of this entire cycle, opening the path toward the $88k–$90k resistance band. On the other hand, losing the $76k low on a closing basis will be the first sign of a failing breakout.
BTC/USDT 4-Hour Chart
On the 4-hour chart, the steeper pink trendline inside the large channel has proven itself as the shorter-term dynamic support. The price has bounced cleanly off it near $76k before climbing above $80k. The RSI has cooled from its recent peak and is hovering around 50, which can point to a healthy reset that removes the short-term overbought risk without signaling any meaningful deterioration in trend, unless it falls deep below 50.
The short-term range is well-defined, as the ascending trendline and the $76k brown zone at the recent low define the support structure. A drop below these levels would expose the $70k-$72k demand zone. Meanwhile, the $82k supply zone and the upper channel boundary form the ceiling. A 4-hour close above $82k with RSI recovering toward 65 would signal the consolidation is resolving bullishly and hint at a rally toward the high $80k region.
Sentiment Analysis
The funding rate chart has just printed a couple of slightly convincing positive readings and ended the weeks-long stretch of deeply negative bars that accompanied the entire recovery from below $70k to current levels. This transition matters not just as a data point but as a market psychology signal.
The cohort of traders who were net short through the entirety of the recent rally has either been liquidated or capitulated, and fresh long positioning is now beginning to accumulate at prices above $80k.
The +0.003 reading remains modest in absolute terms, as during the 2025 bull run, funding regularly printed above 0.010. At current levels, there is significant room for long positioning to build before reaching the kind of overheated conditions that historically precede sharp corrections.
The practical implication is that the character of the rally is evolving, and what began as a short-squeeze-driven, disbelief-fueled recovery is transitioning into a phase where genuine long conviction is re-entering the market.

The post Bitcoin Price Analysis: BTC Maintains Key Support Levels, Will the Rebound Continue? appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Crypto World
Ethereum Launches Clear Signing Standard to Combat Blind Signing Risks
TLDR:
- Ethereum’s Clear Signing standard now displays transactions in plain language instead of unreadable hex data.
- Blind signing has contributed to billions in ecosystem losses, prompting this open standard’s coordinated launch.
- ERC-7730 and ERC-8176 are the two core frameworks introduced to support human-readable transaction signing.
- Contributors include Ledger, Trezor, MetaMask, Fireblocks, and WalletConnect, coordinated by the Ethereum Foundation.
Ethereum has officially launched the Clear Signing open standard, marking a major step forward in transaction security.
The initiative converts unreadable hexadecimal data into plain, human-readable text during transaction approvals. The Ethereum Foundation coordinated the effort alongside key industry contributors.
Together, they aim to address one of the most persistent security vulnerabilities in the Ethereum ecosystem. Blind signing has cost the industry billions of dollars over the years.
What the Clear Signing Standard Brings to Ethereum
The Ethereum Foundation announced the launch via its official X account on May 12, 2026. The post stated that clear signing is now live as an open standard to end blind signing.
It described the development as a major upgrade to both user experience and transaction security on Ethereum.
Until now, signing a transaction often meant approving a string of unreadable hex data. This practice, known as blind signing, has contributed to billions in losses across the ecosystem. Users had no way to verify what they were actually approving before confirming transactions.
The new standard changes that by displaying transaction details in plain language. Instead of raw technical data, users now see clear descriptions of what each transaction does. This gives people better control and awareness before they confirm any on-chain action.
The Ethereum Foundation noted the effort builds on existing clear signing work already present in the ecosystem. In particular, it acknowledged the approach pioneered by Ledger as a foundation for this broader, unified standard.
Key Components and Contributors Behind the Initiative
Several prominent names in the crypto industry contributed to the Clear Signing initiative. Wallet and hardware contributors include Ledger, Trezor, MetaMask, WalletConnect, and ZKnox. On the security side, Cyfrin participated, while Fireblocks and Zama represented infrastructure. Sourcify and Argot contributed tooling support.
The standard introduces ERC-7730, which provides an open framework for human-readable transaction descriptions.
Alongside it comes a neutral, mirrorable descriptor registry for broader accessibility. An attestation framework under ERC-8176 allows auditors to verify the integrity of transaction descriptors.
Open developer tooling has also been released for wallets, protocols, and auditors to use. These tools make it easier for developers to integrate the standard across different platforms. The goal is to drive adoption and expand coverage across the Ethereum ecosystem consistently.
The Ethereum Foundation confirmed the work is ongoing and not a one-time release. Contributors will continue expanding coverage, refining tooling, and pushing for wider adoption.
As more wallets and protocols integrate the standard, blind signing risks are expected to decrease steadily across the network.
Crypto World
Franklin Templeton and Kraken’s Payward team up to tokenize Wall Street
Kraken parent Payward will plug Franklin Templeton’s BENJI tokenized money market fund into its platform as collateral and cash management, letting clients earn yield on idle dollars on‑chain.
Summary
- Kraken’s parent company Payward has struck a strategic partnership with Franklin Templeton to bring tokenized stocks, yield products and the BENJI money market fund onto blockchain rails for institutional and select retail clients.
- Franklin Templeton’s BENJI tokenized money market fund will be integrated into Kraken’s platform as collateral and cash management infrastructure, while Payward’s xStocks framework — which has processed over $30 billion in transaction volume since launch — will co-develop new on-chain actively managed products.
- The deal lands as Franklin Templeton deepens its crypto footprint through the acquisition of crypto investment firm 250 Digital and the expansion of its Franklin Crypto division, signaling that one of the world’s largest asset managers is treating blockchain distribution as a core business line rather than a side project.
Kraken’s parent company Payward and Franklin Templeton have announced a strategic partnership to tokenize traditional financial products and distribute them through Kraken’s exchange infrastructure, according to reporting by Decrypt.
BENJI meets xStocks in a $30B tokenization partnership
The immediate deliverable is an integration of Franklin Templeton’s BENJI tokenized money market fund into the Kraken platform, where it will function as collateral and a cash management tool for institutional clients — effectively letting professional traders park idle capital in a yield-bearing, on-chain dollar instrument without leaving the Kraken ecosystem.
BENJI, which Franklin Templeton launched in 2021 on the Stellar blockchain before expanding to Polygon, Arbitrum and other networks, is one of the longest-running tokenized money market funds in the industry and a direct competitor to BlackRock’s BUIDL, which recently crossed $2.3 billion in assets under management. By embedding BENJI into Kraken’s collateral framework, Franklin Templeton gains a distribution channel that reaches both institutional desks and the exchange’s large retail base in jurisdictions where the product is available, while Kraken gains a regulated, yield-generating dollar instrument it can offer as an alternative to idle USDT or USDC balances sitting in trading accounts.
Beyond BENJI, the two firms plan to use Payward’s xStocks framework as the foundation for new on-chain actively managed products, making Franklin Templeton’s investment strategies available to institutions and retail investors in specific jurisdictions. xStocks, a previous crypto.news story noted, has processed over $30 billion in transaction volume since launching last year, building a tokenized equity infrastructure that now spans more than 50 U.S. stocks and ETFs and positions Kraken as one of the leading venues for on-chain traditional asset exposure outside of dedicated RWA platforms like Ondo Finance.
Franklin Crypto, 250 Digital and the race to own on-chain distribution
The Payward partnership is one piece of a broader push by Franklin Templeton to build a vertically integrated crypto and tokenization business. The firm has advanced its dedicated crypto division, Franklin Crypto, through the acquisition of crypto investment firm 250 Digital, adding research, portfolio management and distribution capabilities that complement its existing tokenized fund products. Franklin Templeton’s XRPZ spot ETF also led Monday’s XRP ETF inflow data with $13.6 million in a single day, making it the top product in a five-fund cohort that collectively pulled in $25.8 million — the largest daily XRP ETF inflow since January 5, 2026 — as covered in a recent crypto.news story.
Taken together, Franklin Templeton now has a spot XRP ETF, a tokenized money market fund on multiple chains, a crypto investment arm via 250 Digital, and a distribution partnership with one of the world’s largest crypto exchanges. That stack puts it in a structurally different position from most traditional asset managers, which are still debating whether to file a single tokenized product rather than building an end-to-end on-chain distribution network. As a crypto.news story on BlackRock’s second tokenized fund SEC filing with Securitize showed, the race among the largest traditional asset managers to own on-chain distribution is now openly competitive, with BlackRock, Franklin Templeton and Fidelity all moving simultaneously on tokenized product lines that would have been considered experimental as recently as 2023. For Kraken, landing Franklin Templeton as a product partner rather than just a custody client is the clearest signal yet that xStocks is evolving from a tokenized equity venue into a full institutional financial product platform with Wall Street names behind it.
Crypto World
BeInCrypto Institutional Research: 15 Firms Building Crypto Trading Infrastructure
Best Institutional Trading Infrastructure is a category within the BeInCrypto Institutional 100, an annual research-driven program recognising institutional digital asset excellence across 26 categories and six pillars.
This category sits under Pillar 2: Capital Markets & Infrastructure. The 15 firms below are listed alphabetically and are not ranked. A shortlist will be named in May 2026, with the winner announced at Proof of Talk in Paris on June 2–3, 2026.
Key Facts
- Long list: 15 firms across OMS/EMS platforms, prime brokerage, OTC desks, market makers, regulated venues, off-exchange settlement, and exchange-affiliated institutional product surfaces
- Initial pool: More than 30 firms screened; 15 advanced to the long list
- Order: Listed alphabetically, not ranked
- Scoring: 30% quantitative data · 50% Expert Council · 20% disclosed company data
- Criteria assessed: Client base and volume, venue connectivity, execution quality, product breadth, regulatory licensure, settlement framework, institutional reputation, innovation signal
- Data sources: FCA, NYDFS, FINMA, BaFin, MAS, SFC, MiCA-CASP registers, audited filings, issuer disclosures, partnership announcements, KBRA/Kroll, PitchBook, Tracxn, and Crunchbase
| Firm | Trading Infra Sub-Segment | HQ | Reach | Top Licensure / Platform | Representative Work |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| B2C2 | Institutional OTC and algorithmic execution | London, UK | SBI Holdings majority-owned Offices in London, New York, Tokyo, Singapore |
FCA, NYDFS BitLicense, Luxembourg VA EU MiFID framework |
24/7 OTC across spot, derivatives, and structured products Launched Solana stablecoin settlement infrastructure |
| Binance Institutional | Exchange-affiliated institutional surface | Dubai, UAE | Largest crypto exchange by global volume SAFU reserves above $1B |
VARA Dubai licence Multi-jurisdiction VASP footprint |
OTC desk, broker program, custody integrations, and liquidity programs Institutional surface assessed; retail exchange core excluded |
| Bitget | Exchange-affiliated institutional surface | Seychelles | 120M+ users at parent level Global exchange and broker ecosystem |
Multi-jurisdiction VASP footprint Bitget PRO institutional surface |
Universal Exchange framework across spot, derivatives, and tokenized TradFi Institutional surface assessed; retail exchange core excluded |
| Boerse Stuttgart Digital | European regulated exchange infrastructure | Stuttgart, Germany | Parent group is a major European retail exchange operator Institutional custody and trading infrastructure |
BaFin and MiCAR-CASP authorised BSDEX and institutional custody stack |
Combines regulated German trading venue and custody infrastructure Serves institutional access through Boerse Stuttgart Digital Custody |
| Cumberland (DRW) | TradFi prop firm crypto desk | Chicago, USA | Combines a regulated German trading venue and custody infrastructure Serves institutional access through Boerse Stuttgart Digital Custody |
TradFi-regulated proprietary trading firm Institutional crypto OTC desk |
Provides institutional crypto OTC and market-making services Extends DRW’s trading infrastructure into digital assets |
| FalconX | Full-stack institutional prime broker | San Mateo, CA, USA | $2T+ cumulative trading volume 2,000+ institutional clients |
Multi-jurisdiction regulatory footprint EMS, OMS, credit, and clearing platform |
Acquired 21Shares, closed Nov 2025 Builds trading, credit, clearing, and asset-management access under one roof |
| KuCoin Institutional | Exchange-affiliated institutional surface | Providenciales, Turks and Caicos | 40M+ users at parent level 1,000+ broker and fintech partners |
AUSTRAC registration MiCAR-CASP via KuCoin EU |
OES integrations with BitGo, Cactus, and Ceffu MirrorX Institutional surface assessed; retail exchange core excluded |
| LMAX Digital | Institutional-only matched venue | London, UK | Sub-millisecond latency LD4 and NY4 co-location |
FCA-regulated venue FIX 4.4 connectivity |
Institutional-only central limit order book Part of LMAX Group’s multi-asset venue infrastructure |
| Nonco | FX-style bilateral institutional crypto | Mexico City, Mexico | $5B+ monthly trading volume Founded in 2023 |
Multi-jurisdiction operating footprint Bilateral streaming liquidity model |
FX On-Chain protocol launched on Avalanche Settled derivatives transaction using FOBXX/BENJI |
| OSL Digital | Asia institutional platform | Hong Kong | OSL Group listed on HKEX Core operating income up 150% in 2025 |
Hong Kong SFC licence Institutional trading and custody platform |
Completed Banxa take-private in Jan 2026 Combines block OTC liquidity with segregated custody |
| Ripple Prime | Multi-asset prime broker | New York, USA | 300+ institutional clients $3T annual clearing pre-acquisition |
SEC broker-dealer and CFTC FCM FINRA, SIPC, CME, and FICC member |
Acquired by Ripple for $1.25B, closed Oct 2025 Received KBRA BBB investment-grade rating in Apr 2026 |
| Talos | Institutional EMS, OMS, and SOR | New York, USA | 60 connected venues Asset managers representing $21T AUM |
Institutional technology platform Execution, routing, and portfolio infrastructure |
DRW was founded in 1992 Multi-asset institutional trading coverage |
| Taurus Group | Swiss institutional infrastructure | Geneva, Switzerland | Multi-bank European client base Backed by major financial institutions |
FINMA-licensed SOC 2 Type II and ISO 27001 |
T-PROTECT custody, T-DX exchange, and T-VENTURE issuance Series B led by Credit Suisse, now UBS |
| Virtu Financial (Crypto) | TradFi market maker extending to crypto | New York, USA | NASDAQ: VIRT Major global electronic market maker |
SEC, FINRA, and multi-jurisdiction TradFi licences Crypto desk extension |
Applies TradFi execution technology to digital assets Operates across equities, FX, fixed income, and crypto |
| Wintermute | Market maker and institutional OTC platform | London, UK | FCA-affiliated group structure Wintermute Asia is regulated separately |
FCA-affiliated group structure Wintermute Asia regulated separately |
NODE institutional trading platform Added tokenized gold OTC trading and crude oil CFDs |
About This List
The BeInCrypto Institutional 100 — Best Institutional Trading Infrastructure (2026 Long List) identifies firms that provide the trading infrastructure institutional clients use to access digital asset markets. This includes order management, execution management, smart order routing, transaction cost analysis, risk management, settlement, prime brokerage, OTC liquidity, and off-exchange settlement.
Coverage spans pure-play infrastructure firms, multi-asset prime brokers, institutional market makers, regulated European and APAC venues, and exchange-affiliated institutional product surfaces. Core retail exchange spot and derivatives platforms are not scored in this category. For Binance Institutional, KuCoin Institutional, and Bitget, the review is limited to institutional surfaces such as OTC desks, broker programs, OES, custody integrations, and RWA collateral frameworks.
Methodology
This category is evaluated under Track B of the BeInCrypto Institutional 100 methodology: 30% quantitative metrics, 50% Expert Council scoring, and 20% disclosed company data.
Assessment spans eight criteria: client base and volume, venue connectivity, execution quality, product breadth, regulatory licensure, risk and settlement framework, institutional reputation, and innovation signal.
The disclosed data weighting reflects the limited public visibility into institutional client counts, OMS/EMS volume, prime brokerage flows, and venue connectivity depth. Nominee-submitted data gives the Expert Council additional verifiable inputs for otherwise opaque infrastructure metrics.
Data was verified using regulatory registers, audited filings, issuer disclosures, partnership announcements, third-party rating agencies, including KBRA and Kroll, and private-market sources, including PitchBook, Tracxn, and Crunchbase.
The post BeInCrypto Institutional Research: 15 Firms Building Crypto Trading Infrastructure appeared first on BeInCrypto.
Crypto World
Bitcoin eyes $90,000 as inflation priced in and CLARITY Act looms
21Shares’ Matt Mena says Bitcoin’s refusal to dump on hot CPI shows inflation is priced in, leaving the CLARITY Act vote as the next major catalyst for a push toward $90K.
Summary
- 21Shares analyst Matt Mena says Bitcoin’s failure to sell off on hot inflation data signals the market has already priced in macroeconomic headwinds, with BTC holding above the key $80,000 support level.
- Mena sees a path from the current $82,000 resistance retest toward $85,000 as macro friction clears, with the Senate CLARITY Act vote identified as the next major catalyst that could push price toward $90,000.
- The analysis lands as Bitcoin trades around $82,010, open interest across derivatives venues climbs, and the legislative calendar compresses multiple potential catalysts into a single week.
21Shares analyst Matt Mena argued in a note published by Sina Finance that Bitcoin’s resilience in the face of elevated U.S. inflation data is itself a bullish signal, writing that BTC “did not decline due to inflation data,” which he interprets as evidence that “the market has already priced in the overheating inflation data.”
With Bitcoin currently trading around $82,010 — a level confirmed by Gate market data showing a 0.81% 24-hour gain — the $80,000 level is now being treated as a structurally significant floor rather than a soft support, with Mena framing it as the threshold above which the macro-to-bull-market transition remains intact.
Inflation is priced in, $80,000 holds as the line in the sand
The inflation data in question refers to the latest U.S. CPI print, which came in above consensus expectations and would, in a prior cycle, have triggered a sharp BTC sell-off as traders priced in a more hawkish Fed path. The fact that it did not — and that Bitcoin instead grinded higher — is the core of Mena’s thesis: the market is no longer treating every hot inflation print as a binary negative for risk assets, suggesting that the macro resistance that capped BTC’s upside through most of 2025 is gradually being absorbed. That repricing dynamic is consistent with how institutional investors, including the corporate treasury buyers and ETF allocators who now dominate marginal BTC demand, tend to behave: they buy dips on bad macro news rather than selling, because their investment horizon is measured in years rather than trading sessions.
A previous crypto.news story on Bitcoin’s technical structure noted how open interest has been climbing across derivatives venues even as spot price consolidates, a pattern that technicians read as coiled energy rather than distribution, and that sits alongside MicroStrategy’s confirmed stack of 818,869 BTC worth roughly $65.8 billion as evidence that the largest holders are not treating current levels as a selling opportunity.
CLARITY Act vote as the $90,000 catalyst
Mena’s price path is sequential: first a clean break and close above $82,000 resistance, then a push toward $85,000 as macro headwinds clear, and finally a potential run toward $90,000 if the Senate CLARITY Act vote delivers a positive outcome. That legislative catalyst is now imminent, with Senator Cynthia Lummis confirming on X that the U.S. Digital Asset Market Structure Act is entering Senate Banking Committee markup this week after nearly a year of bipartisan work, and the White House targeting a Trump signature before July 4.
The CLARITY Act’s direct relevance to Bitcoin price is less about Bitcoin’s own regulatory status — which is broadly settled as a commodity — and more about what a comprehensive U.S. digital asset framework does to institutional risk appetite across the entire crypto market. When allocators at pension funds, endowments and family offices see a clear legal distinction between digital commodities and digital securities, with CFTC jurisdiction over the former and a workable registration path for the latter, the compliance barrier that has kept many of them in “watch and wait” mode since 2022 begins to dissolve. That re-engagement, expressed through ETF inflows, separately-managed account allocations and further corporate treasury accumulation, is the mechanism by which the CLARITY Act translates into BTC price rather than being a purely symbolic milestone.
In that context, Mena’s $90,000 target looks conservative rather than aggressive. A crypto.news story on the legislative backdrop for Bitcoin’s next move noted that options markets are already pricing a meaningful probability of a $90,000 to $95,000 test before end of May, and that the convergence of the CLARITY Act markup, the May 14 House stablecoin vote and BlackRock’s new tokenized fund SEC filing — covered in a separate crypto.news story — creates a week in which multiple institutional confidence signals are firing simultaneously for the first time in this cycle. Whether $90,000 arrives this month or in Q3, the structural argument is the same: inflation is already in the price, the legislative framework is weeks away, and the largest holders are still buying.
Crypto World
Ray Dalio says Bitcoin blocks central banks
Ray Dalio said Bitcoin lacks privacy and its transparency is why central banks will not hold it.
Summary
- Bridgewater founder Ray Dalio posted on X that Bitcoin lacks privacy and its transactions can be monitored and potentially controlled by governments.
- Dalio said gold remains superior because it is more widely held, deeply established, and still plays a central role in the global financial system.
- Michael Saylor pushed back directly, calling Bitcoin’s transparency a feature rather than a flaw that makes it usable as global digital collateral.
Bridgewater Associates founder Ray Dalio posted on X on May 11 that Bitcoin’s public ledger is the core reason central banks are unlikely to adopt it as a reserve asset. “Bitcoin lacks privacy,” Dalio said. “Transactions can be monitored and potentially controlled, which is why central banks aren’t looking to hold it.”
Dalio, who allocates roughly 1% of his own portfolio to bitcoin, framed the post as an extension of comments he first made on the All-In Podcast in March. He identified three structural weaknesses: lack of privacy, high correlation with technology stocks, and a market size still far smaller than gold’s.
Why Dalio favours gold over bitcoin
“Ultimately, gold is more widely held, deeply established, and still plays a central role in the global system,” Dalio wrote. He pointed to Bitcoin’s tendency to trade in line with Nasdaq-listed tech stocks, arguing that this reduces its appeal as an independent hedge when investors face pressure elsewhere in their portfolios.
Dalio’s comments arrived as Bitcoin’s correlation with the Nasdaq Composite climbed from 0.16 to 0.85 since the Iran war began, per data from TradingView. He also raised the possibility of future quantum computing threats to Bitcoin’s cryptographic security, a concern security experts say affects the entire financial system rather than Bitcoin alone.
The broader debate around Bitcoin and central bank reserves has intensified since the US government formally established a strategic Bitcoin reserve in 2025 and several other sovereign wealth vehicles began accumulating BTC, though at volumes still small compared with gold holdings globally.
Saylor and Bitwise push back
Strategy executive chairman Michael Saylor responded directly, calling Bitcoin’s transparency a feature rather than a flaw. “It is precisely what makes Bitcoin usable as global collateral,” he said, arguing that a verifiable, auditable asset that any party can confirm without trusting a third party is structurally superior for institutional use.
Bitwise CIO Matt Hougan offered a more nuanced counter, conceding that Dalio’s concerns are real but arguing they represent an investment opportunity rather than a permanent barrier. “These criticisms are quite literally the opportunity,” Hougan said. “If these critiques did not exist, bitcoin would already be at $1 million a coin.”
Crypto World
Senate Approves Kevin Warsh to Federal Reserve Board Seat
The U.S. Senate gave the nod to Kevin Warsh for a seat on the Federal Reserve Board on Tuesday in a vote of 51-45.
The move brought Warsh one step nearer to replacing Jerome Powell as Federal Reserve chief when his two-year term ends. As legislators get ready for another Senate vote that might finally raise Warsh to the top job at the central bank.
The Senate confirmed Kevin Warsh to a 14-year term on the Federal Reserve Board, effective Feb 1, 2026. His nomination advanced in the chamber after a successful closure vote, which was the first step in the process for his nomination to be approved. Warsh was thus able to come back to the Fed as governor in the midst of the financial crisis in 2008.
Now lawmakers will vote independently on the appointment of the new Federal Reserve chair. Closure was already approved in the Senate for that nomination, speeding up the final vote. This means that Warsh could potentially step in as Powell’s successor as soon as tomorrow.
By the time Powell’s term as chairman expires on Friday, Warsh will be able to take over the position. But Powell’s tenure as a member of the Federal Reserve Board will not terminate upon his resignation from the Fed chair. So, even with the likely promotion of Warsh, the White House will not have a majority on the board.
There was a quick turnaround in market expectations following fresh inflation data that indicated the economy continued to experience price rises in the United States.
The Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose 3.8 per cent annually in April, more than the forecasted rate of 3.7 per cent. Energy prices were also high due to the geopolitical situation that caused the disruption of supply.
The sentiment around a Fed rate hike in 2026 has increased, according to prediction site Polymarket. The chances rose to 27% after the inflation report and the Senate confirmation vote for Warsh. By contrast, previous predictions were centred primarily on a flat interest rate all year.
The Federal Reserve’s central committee had already given some indication of increased inflation worries at its April meeting. Policymakers called inflation elevated, instead of somewhat elevated. As a result, financial markets renewed their debate on the need for tighter monetary policy.
The decision to let Warsh’s confirmation has significant policy implications.
In earlier speeches and debates, Warsh has advocated greater measures to combat inflation. His anticipated leadership may affect future Fed decisions about borrowing rates and the level of liquidity. Meanwhile, policymakers remain in a delicate balance between fighting inflation and ensuring overall economic stability.
President Donald Trump has been a strong proponent for reducing interest rates to boost economic activity and lending. But the administration continues to have less influence over the board to compel quick policy shifts at the Fed. Powell’s tenacity on the board also restricts a sudden U-turn in policy post-transition of leadership.
The Fed is facing pressure as inflation keeps coming in above the long-term 2% target. The US-Iran conflict has brought new pressure into consumer markets and supply chains due to rising energy prices. As a result, the Central Bank is being called upon to keep its monetary policy tight for a longer duration.
The confirmation also coincides with a volatile and critical time for financial markets and government borrowing. Treasury yields have been volatile following a reassessment of inflation risks and Fed policy decisions by traders. Meanwhile, the economy keeps influencing the outlook for US monetary policy.
While the Federal Reserve leadership has changed, multiple analysts believe the Fed will continue to be cautious in its policy. The inflation readings have made rate cut expectations, which many market participants had earlier this year, more difficult. This will consequently keep rates high for an extended period.
The Senate vote on Warsh’s nomination as chair may shape Fed policy in the weeks ahead. The confirmation would put him in charge as the inflation pressure is increasing and the geopolitical situation is uncertain. As a result, financial markets will remain sensitive to economic data and leadership changes from the Fed.
Crypto World
DTCC Chainlink deal targets 24/7 collateral management
The DTCC Chainlink Collateral AppChain partnership will automate 24/7 collateral management across global markets by Q4 2026.
Summary
- DTCC will integrate the Chainlink Runtime Environment into its Collateral AppChain to automate pricing, valuation, margining, and settlement across financial markets.
- The Collateral AppChain targets a Q4 2026 production launch and extends a 2024 Smart NAV pilot that included JPMorgan, BNY Mellon, and Franklin Templeton.
- Chainlink co-founder Sergey Nazarov called collateral management the killer application that traditional finance has been waiting for from blockchain infrastructure.
The Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation has announced that its Collateral AppChain will integrate the Chainlink Runtime Environment and Chainlink’s data standard to power pricing, valuation, margining, collateral optimization, and settlement. The platform is targeting a Q4 2026 production launch.
“By leveraging tokenization and distributed ledger technology to modernize collateral mobility, our goal is to enable 24/7, near real-time collateral management across global markets and blockchains,” said Nadine Chakar, DTCC managing director and global head of digital assets. DTCC processed $4.7 quadrillion in securities transactions in 2025.
What the Collateral AppChain does
The platform tokenizes collateral and uses smart contracts to automate workflows across collateral providers, receivers, managers, triparty agents, and custodians through a shared, interoperable infrastructure.
Chainlink provides the data and orchestration layer, connecting asset prices and valuations with collateral movement, eligibility checks, margining calculations, and settlement instructions.
The collaboration extends the Smart NAV pilot that DTCC and Chainlink ran in 2024, which tested mutual fund net asset value data delivery onto blockchains with JPMorgan, Franklin Templeton, and BNY Mellon participating. The AppChain was first unveiled during DTCC’s Great Collateral Experiment.
Sergey Nazarov, Chainlink co-founder, said CRE will orchestrate “critical outputs in a secure, private and compliant manner” and called collateral management “the killer app that traditional finance has been waiting for from our industry.” LINK surged more than 20% on the day of the announcement as traders priced in the institutional validation.
Context and next steps
DTCC also confirmed that a separate tokenization service will launch in October 2026, with more than 50 companies having joined its tokenized services working group and a limited live-transaction test planned for July.
The Chainlink partnership spans the entire collateral lifecycle, from initial pricing data to final settlement, something the firm has been building toward through successive institutional mandates including SWIFT, UBS, and the Bank of England.
The deal marks one of the most significant direct integrations between Chainlink infrastructure and Wall Street’s post-trade clearing system. If the Q4 2026 production launch proceeds on schedule, it would represent the first time a CFTC and SEC regulated clearinghouse has operated collateral workflows across multiple blockchains around the clock without traditional market-hours constraints.
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