Crypto exchange Kraken has debuted a platform targeted at institutional investors in a bid to work with those getting involved in the crypto space.
The company’s new institutional brand was designed to pull existing Kraken offerings into one place for clients, according to Tim Ogilvie, global head of Kraken’s institutional business.
Such services include the company’s spot exchange, as well as its derivatives trading, qualified custody and indices via Kraken subsidiary CF Benchmarks.
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“The diversification of the institutional market to include more types of asset managers makes this a timely development, particularly as the institutional adoption of crypto is expected to grow rapidly,” Ogilvie told Blockworks.
Kraken Institutional’s full product suite is set to launch later this year, including “qualified custody” services offered by Kraken Financial — a Wyoming-chartered Special Purpose Depository Institution.
Various segment firms have drawn up crypto custody services in recent months after the US Securities and Exchange Commission proposed in February 2023 to require the “safekeeping of client assets” to what they call “qualified custodians.”
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“Kraken’s new institutional brand is less about grabbing existing market share and more about preparing the ground for new entrants as they start to engage in the digital asset class,” Ogilvie said.
Kraken’s institutional brand launch comes about three years after Coinbase launched the beta version of Coinbase Prime, which offers custody, trading and analytics to institutions.
The publicly traded Kraken rival more recently introduced a lending platform targeted at US institutional investors in September. It then debuted a smart contract platform letting institutions trade and create new digital assets.
Coinbase said in its fourth quarter shareholder letter published earlier this month that it grew its client base using its trade financing and portfolio margin products in Prime.
Institutional customers staked $7.4 billion in assets through Coinbase Prime, and the exchange — a custodian for eight of the 10 US spot bitcoin ETFs — notched custodial fee revenue of $20 million during the fourth quarter.
“There is plenty of space for more than one institutional crypto offering,” Ogilvie said. “As more institutional investors start to enter the space, the total addressable market will only grow.”