The bank’s digital asset head says Citi is aiming for a “credible custody solution” in the coming quarters to serve asset managers and other clients.
Oct 13, 2025, 7:23 p.m.
Citi (C) plans to offer crypto custody services in 2026, enabling the bank to hold native digital assets like bitcoin and ether on behalf of clients, according to a report by CNBC.
The move marks another step by the Wall Street bank into the digital asset space. Biswarup Chatterjee, Citi’s global head of partnerships and innovation for services, said the custody solution has been in development for two to three years.
“We have various kinds of explorations,” Chatterjee told CNBC. “We’re hoping that in the next few quarters, we can come to market with a credible custody solution that we can offer to our asset managers and other clients.”
The custody plan would give institutional clients a regulated way to store crypto, a piece of infrastructure many traditional investors view as essential for exposure to the sector.
Chatterjee said Citi is pursuing a hybrid approach, developing some custody tools internally while also exploring outside partnerships.
“We may have certain solutions that are completely designed and built in-house … whereas we may use a third-party, lightweight, nimble solution for other kinds of assets,” he said. “We’re not currently ruling out anything.”
The custody offering would join a growing portfolio of digital asset experiments at Citi. During the bank’s second-quarter earnings call in July, CEO Jane Fraser said Citi is also exploring a stablecoin issuance, though she noted that tokenized deposits are a more immediate focus.
Last week, Citi Ventures invested in BVNK, a stablecoin payments startup, alongside Visa. That deal followed earlier experiments in blockchain-based trade finance and cross-border payments.
If launched, Citi’s custody service would place the bank among a small but growing group of traditional financial institutions entering the crypto back office.
AI Disclaimer: Parts of this article were generated with the assistance from AI tools and reviewed by our editorial team to ensure accuracy and adherence to our standards. For more information, see CoinDesk’s full AI Policy.
More For You
Crypto Trading Volumes Fall 17.5% in September Despite Record Open Interest

Combined spot and derivatives volumes fell 17.5% in September, continuing a four-year seasonal trend
What to know:
- Trading activity falls 17.5% in September slowdown: Combined spot and derivatives volumes dropped to $8.12 trillion, marking the first decline after three months of growth. September has now seen reduced trading volume for the fourth consecutive year.
- Open interest reaches record high despite derivatives market share decline: Total open interest surged 3.2% to $204 billion and peaked at an all-time high of $230 billion during the month.
- Altcoins on CME outperform as Bitcoin and Ether futures decline: While CME’s total derivatives volume stayed flat at $287 billion (-0.08%), SOL futures jumped 57.1% to $13.5 billion and XRP futures rose 7.19% to $7.84 billion. BTC and ETH futures fell 4.05% and 17.9% respectively.
More For You
Bitcoin’s Leverage Flush Favors Accumulation, K33 Says

Crypto prices were down sizably on Tuesday but bounced off of their worst levels.
What to know:
- Bitcoin and cryptos finished sizably lower but off their worst levels as Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell’s slightly dovish comments provided relief for risk assets.
- Bitfarms (BITF), Cleanspark (CLSK), Iren (IREN), Marathon Digital (MARA) and TeraWulf (WULF) surged over 10% as investors continue to bid up BTC miners as AI infrastructure plays.
- Friday’s leverage drawdown creates a “constructive setup,” K33 research head Vetle Lunde said.
