Crypto custody firm Copper is exploring a potential sale at a valuation of roughly $500 million, according to people familiar with the matter, marking a significant strategic shift for the London-based digital asset infrastructure provider. Investment bank Cantor Fitzgerald has reportedly been appointed to advise on the process, as Copper weighs interest from potential buyers seeking exposure to institutional crypto trading infrastructure.
The possible transaction comes after Copper spent the past two years restructuring its business around ClearLoop, its off-exchange settlement network designed for institutional cryptocurrency trading firms. The company shut down its enterprise custody division in 2023 to concentrate resources on the platform, which has become its primary commercial offering.
ClearLoop emerged as Copper’s central business after restructuring
Founded in 2018, Copper initially positioned itself as a broad digital asset custody provider serving institutional investors, exchanges and trading firms. However, the collapse of several crypto companies during the 2022 market downturn increased institutional demand for systems that reduce counterparty exposure and limit the need to keep assets directly on exchanges.
That shift pushed Copper to prioritize ClearLoop, a settlement system that enables clients to trade across exchanges while maintaining custody of assets within segregated accounts. The model is designed to reduce settlement and counterparty risk by allowing delivery-versus-payment settlement without requiring funds to move on-chain for every transaction.
According to company figures published on its website, ClearLoop now supports more than 1,000 active counterparties and processes over $50 billion in monthly notional trading volume. The platform is integrated with several institutional trading venues and custody providers, including a partnership announced with BitGo aimed at expanding settlement access for institutional clients.
Copper has previously raised capital from a number of high-profile investors during the crypto market’s expansion cycle. Earlier funding rounds included backing from firms such as Dawn Capital and Target Global, while the company reportedly sought valuations above $2 billion during the peak of the 2021 bull market.
The current $500 million sale target reflects both a more cautious investment environment and changing priorities among institutional investors, who are increasingly focused on sustainable revenue, trading volume and infrastructure utility rather than speculative growth. The trend has become more visible as developments like Coinbase gets OCC approval for crypto custody continue to strengthen confidence in regulated digital asset infrastructure and institutional crypto services.
IPO ambitions cooled as crypto financing conditions weakened
Earlier this year, Copper was reported to be evaluating a potential public listing, following broader industry discussions around crypto infrastructure IPOs. However, subdued equity market appetite for digital asset companies and tighter funding conditions appear to have shifted focus toward strategic acquisition discussions instead.
The broader crypto IPO market has slowed considerably in 2026, with investors allocating larger portions of growth capital toward artificial intelligence companies and data infrastructure businesses. At the same time, cryptocurrency prices remaining below prior cycle highs have reduced public-market enthusiasm for some crypto-linked listings. Despite weaker IPO activity, mergers and acquisitions across crypto infrastructure have remained active. Financial institutions and fintech firms continue seeking regulated digital asset capabilities through acquisitions and strategic investments.
This year alone, Mastercard agreed to acquire stablecoin infrastructure provider BVNK in a deal reportedly valued at up to $1.8 billion. Standard Chartered also moved to take full ownership of crypto custodian Zodia Custody, while Bullish announced a multibillion-dollar acquisition of financial administration firm Equiniti. Analysts say institutional custody and settlement infrastructure remains one of the few areas in the crypto sector still attracting consistent strategic interest, particularly as regulators and large trading firms push for stronger risk management standards after recent market failures.
For Copper, the outcome of the sale process may depend on whether buyers view ClearLoop as a scalable piece of institutional market infrastructure rather than a traditional crypto custody business operating in a slower funding environment.
FAQs
1. What is ClearLoop?
ClearLoop is Copper’s off-exchange settlement network that allows institutional traders to settle crypto transactions while keeping assets in custody, reducing counterparty risk.
2. Why is Copper seeking a sale?
The company is reportedly exploring strategic options after shifting its focus toward institutional settlement infrastructure and away from traditional custody services.
3. Who could be interested in acquiring Copper?
Potential buyers could include banks, fintech firms, crypto exchanges or infrastructure providers looking to expand institutional digital asset services.