In 2025, the digital asset industry reached a turning point with record institutional adoption, regulatory progress, and surging mergers and acquisitions. Crypto-native asset managers are positioned to shape this maturing sector, outpacing traditional finance giants through expertise and innovation. Consolidation is extending to asset management, signaling a new era of scale and institutional trust.
The year 2025 marked a pivotal shift for digital assets, as institutional adoption achieved record levels and regulatory clarity started to emerge. A wave of mergers and acquisitions swept through crypto infrastructure, with deal values surpassing $8.6 billion—more than the combined total of the previous four years. This activity highlighted the industry's move toward maturity, driven by lower interest rates, political support, and clearer regulations.
Landmark deals by major players like Coinbase, Ripple, Kraken, and Robinhood underscored a transition from experimentation to strategic consolidation. Extending this trend, early 2026 moves include FalconX's acquisition of 21Shares and Anchorage's purchase of Securitize's wealth management arm. These transactions emphasize control over distribution, product variety, and trust in crypto investing.
Crypto-native firms hold key advantages, including operational know-how in custody, staking, and protocol risks, plus deep research from multiple market cycles. As Jean-Marie Mognetti, CEO of CoinShares, notes, "a once-in-a-generation opportunity is forming for native asset managers to become the defining institutions of an entirely new asset class."
Traditional giants now lead in simple exposures like Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs, expanding the market but leaving innovation to pioneers in active strategies, staking yields, and thematic products. However, regulatory and compliance costs favor larger players, pushing the sector toward concentration similar to traditional finance. Since October 2025, over 100 crypto-related exchange-traded product applications have been filed with the SEC, though some firms are withdrawing to avoid long-term risks.
As fees compress and demands for unified portfolios grow, subscale platforms face challenges. The leaders will blend crypto expertise with institutional operations, serving as hubs for integrated solutions across asset classes. Consolidation is inevitable, with questions centering on who and when.