Bernstein Says Custody Services Are the Foundation for Institutional Crypto Adoption
The crypto custody revenue opportunity could grow to $8 billion by 2033, a report from the brokerage firm said.

The collapse of crypto exchange FTX has led to a greater focus on using regulated custodians, and the custody revenue opportunity could grow to $8 billion by 2033 from less than $300 million today, Bernstein said in a research report on Tuesday.
“Crypto custody is the foundational enabler for institutional adoption,” analysts Gautam Chhugani and Manas Agrawal wrote, adding that “unlike legacy custody, crypto custody is all about securing the private key,” which makes it a more of a technological endeavor.
The Bernstein analysts said post-FTX they expect a jump in “crypto custody penetration” with existing investors and a sharp growth in custody services in the medium term driven by increased institutional participation in digital-asset markets.
The broker said there is a large revenue opportunity for crypto firms and banks to provide Wall Street-like custody, market-making and prime brokerage services to new crypto investors.
Market making is expected to increase as institutional participation grows and with it demand for liquidity in large-cap coins and less popular tokens, the note said. A market maker is a firm that provides liquidity for an asset or security.
Institutional crypto investors will also need prime brokerage services such as over-the-counter trading desks, derivatives, lending and other structured products, and Bernstein estimates that this could grow to a $14 billion revenue opportunity by 2033.
Read more: Bernstein Expects Crypto Revenue to Jump to Around $400B by 2033
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Binance's Richard Teng breaks down the ‘10/10’ nightmare that rocked crypto

Every crypto exchange saw liquidations during the Oct. 10 liquidation event, Richard Teng told the crowd at CoinDesk's Consensus Hong Kong.
What to know:
- Binance Co-CEO Richard Teng said the Oct. 10 crypto crash, which saw about $19 billion in liquidations, was driven by macro shocks like new U.S. tariffs on China and rare earth controls, not by Binance itself.
- Roughly 75% of liquidations occurred around 9 p.m. Eastern amid a stablecoin depegging and transfer slowdowns, but Teng said trading data show no massive withdrawals from Binance, which he said supported affected users.
- Teng argued that crypto remains tied to geopolitical and interest-rate uncertainty, yet institutional and corporate participation continues to grow even as retail demand has cooled.











