State Street Corporation To Offer Custodial Services For Bitcoin And Crypto

Share This Post

State Street Corporation, the largest custodial service provider in the world, plans to launch custodial services for bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies.

  • State Street, the largest asset custodian in the world, plans to launch a custodial service for bitcoin and other digital assets.
  • Globally Systemically Important Financial Institution (G-SIFI) State Street has regulatory hurdles.
  • VP and head of State Street digital says market will “take comfort” from largest custodian in the world offering digital custody of assets

State Street Corporation, an institutional asset manager with over $4.1 trillion in assets, intends to provide custodial services for bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, according to an interview given to Bloomburg.

Nadine Chakar, executive vice president and head of State Street Digital, alluded to the added pressure of regulatory hurdles presented by being a Globally Systemically Important Financial Institution (G-SIFI). These particular institutions are asset managers whose failure could trigger major economic events.

“We think a custodian bank like State Street can continue to do what it’s best at, which is keeping order and safety into the system. But we’ll do it differently,” referring to their status as a G-SIFI, and being the largest custodian in the world.

“It’s my personal mission to prove that elephants can truly dance,” referencing comments that the size of State Street is too big to fail. “The minute we get the nod, we’ll be ready,” Chakar told Bloomberg. “We’re literally investing in the future, we know clients are out there looking for this.”

Chakar spoke to the volatility of bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies saying that further institutional adoption will create a more stable environment, citing one of the reasons she believes State Street can provide this stability is the market would “take comfort” from custodial solutions offered from a G-SIFI of their size.

In December 2019, State Street launched a custodial pilot that was meant to combine the custodial services of Gemini, a cryptocurrency exchange, and the reporting services of State Street.

In June of 2021, State Street launched a digital division, led by Chakar. Joining the growing list of institutional adoption, including Fidelity and their recent “Bitcoin First” initiative, Ron O’ Hanley, CEO of State Street had this to say on digital assets:

“The financial industry is transforming to a digital economy, and we see digital assets as one of the most significant forces impacting our industry over the next five years.”

Read Entire Article
spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Related Posts

New Cryptocurrency ICO FreeDum Fighters Raises $225,000 In Opening Weekend

The 2024 US Election is almost here, and it’s shaking up the market Traders are speculating on what the outcome will mean for the economy and crypto regulation But one project encapsulates this,

Here’s Why The Bitcoin Price Saw Sharp Crash Below $67,000

The Bitcoin price briefly crashed below $67,000 on October 21, although it quickly reclaimed this level as support before the daily close This price decline is believed to be due to its correlation

How DePIN is disrupting Google, Amazon, and Nvidia

This year’s Bitcoin halving and subsequent drops in network activity have once again put pressure on miners’ profit margins With block rewards cut in half and reduced revenue from

Retail Crypto Traders Abandon Spot Trading for Derivatives: What This Meant For Bitcoin

The post Retail Crypto Traders Abandon Spot Trading for Derivatives: What This Meant For Bitcoin appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News October saw a surge in the crypto market, with a 13% rise in

Massive Inflows Push Bitcoin ETFs Higher as Ether Funds Falter

On Monday, US spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) marked another day of gains, pulling in $29429 million in positive inflows In contrast, ether ETFs saw a different story, losing $208 million

Coinbase Files Dual FOIA Requests Demanding Transparency On US Crypto Crackdown

On Monday, Coinbase’s Chief Legal Officer, Paul Grewal, announced that the exchange is ramping up its legal efforts in their ongoing battle with US regulators by filing two new sets of Freedom