Emirates NBD invests in digital asset custodian Zodia Custody
Emirates NBD, a leading banking group, has invested in Zodia Custody, a prominent institution-first digital asset custodian.
The strategic equity investment was made by Emirates NBD's Innovation Fund, the bank's corporate venture fund. Created in 2023, the fund strengthens the bank's digital ambitions and regional expertise in synergy with the agility and technological innovations of FinTech companies.
The UAE is swiftly evolving to become a progressive crypto hub following landmark crypto-friendly policies and the highest cryptocurrency adoption rates in the world. About 30% of the population owns cryptocurrency and the crypto market is expected to increase by 8% year-on-year over the next four years.
Digital asset custody solutions
Headquartered in London, Zodia Custody tailors digital asset custody solutions for institutional clients in alignment to regulatory requirements, ensuring institutions can make informed investment decisions according to market trends with the highest levels of security. Emirates NBD's investment in Zodia Custody marks a monumental step forward for the firm and reinforces its vision for the future of digital assets.
Marwan Hadi, Group Head of Retail Banking and Wealth Management, Emirates NBD, said: 'Our strategic investment in Zodia Custody reflects our commitment to creating an environment where digital asset trading venues and forward-thinking institutions can interact safely, securely and without compromise. FinTech is changing the institutional landscape rapidly and we want to ensure our ongoing support to emerging technologies to bolster this growth by bridging the gap between financial services and digital assets.'
He added: 'Our investment is significant in light of the UAE's progressive approach to digital asset regulation and its ambition to become a global innovation and technology hub. Additionally, it aligns with the Dubai Economic Agenda D33 that envisages the Emirate among the top four global financial hubs and a preferred capital market in the Middle East, Africa and South Asia region.'
Neeraj Makin, Group Head of Strategy, Analytics and Venture Capital at Emirates NBD, said: 'Emirates NBD has decades of experience in leveraging innovation to simplify banking. The investment in Zodia Custody's robust and unique offerings positions Emirates NBD at the forefront of digital asset innovation, a trillion-dollar-asset class. The Menat region is transforming rapidly into a key player in the crypto economy fuelled by institutional and enterprise activity and a growing appetite for DeFi and Stablecoins. In line with our vision to be a digital leader in the region, we are making strategic investments via the Innovation Fund and committed to fostering a culture of innovation.'
Key step forward
Julian Sawyer, CEO of Zodia Custody, said: 'As the fifth bank to cast a vote of confidence in our proposition, we are beyond grateful to Emirates NBD for placing their trust in us. This investment is a monumental step forward, paving the way for Zodia Custody to become a leading player globally.'
Alex Manson, CEO of Standard Chartered Ventures, said: "Emirates NBD's investment marks the fifth TradFi institution supporting our Digital Assets venture Zodia Custody. As we build an ecosystem of infrastructure to operate Digital Assets at institutional grade, we are grateful for this recognition, support and most importantly look forward to our partnership.'
The Innovation Fund targets investment in a wide range of stages for the group, from early to growth, with the aim of delivering strategic benefits and realising long-term returns from investments. The purpose of the Innovation Fund is to support the organisation's ambitions to be at the forefront of innovation, key industry trends including disruptions and continue to offer customers best-in-class digital experiences.
Copyright 2024 Al Hilal Publishing and Marketing Group Provided by SyndiGate Media Inc. (Syndigate.info).
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Arabian Post
an hour ago
- Arabian Post
SEC Reverses Gensler-Era Crypto Crackdown
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission chair Paul Atkins has formally withdrawn several cryptocurrency-focused rule proposals initiated under former chair Gary Gensler, representing a decisive shift in regulatory strategy. At the centre of the SEC's action are two major proposals: amendments to Exchange Act Rule 3b‑16, which sought to classify decentralized finance protocols as securities exchanges, and the implementation of enhanced custody requirements under the Investment Advisers Act for client crypto assets. The withdrawal, confirmed on 13 June 2025, reflects a broader deregulatory drive under the current administration. Rule 3b‑16 had been poised to expand the SEC's definition of 'exchange' to include systems bringing together buyers and sellers of securities via smart contracts and other DeFi mechanisms. The proposal would have subjected many decentralised platforms to full regulatory oversight, unsettling industry participants and drawing criticism from blockchain developers and legal experts. Many in the crypto sector argued the move would permanently conflate DeFi infrastructure with traditional securities exchanges, hampering innovation. ADVERTISEMENT The custody rule aimed to require investment advisers to deposit all client crypto assets with 'qualified custodians' such as banks or registered broker‑dealers. That would have effectively sidelined many crypto-native custodians that don't meet these standards. Proponents cited the need for robust safeguards, while opponents warned the rule would force clients into a narrow pool of custodians and increase costs. The SEC's withdrawal announcement emphasised that it will not pursue finalisation of these proposals and may 'consider new rulemaking in the future.' The reversals are part of a broader retreat from Gensler-era initiatives, including planned ESG reporting mandates and cybersecurity obligations. Acting chair Mark Uyeda had suspended both the DeFi exchange and custody rules in March, and this withdrawal gives that decision official effect. Market reaction was swift. Coinbase's chief legal officer, Paul Grewal, declared on X that the agency had scrapped '3b16, qualified custodian, and all other unfinished Gensler rule proposals.' Crypto platforms welcomed the rollback, viewing it as a reaffirmation of self‑custody and decentralised financial innovation. Institutional stakeholders also voiced support. Brian Laverdure, Senior VP of Digital Assets and Innovation Policy at ICBA, noted the agency's publication had 'withdraws several NPRMs' including definition of 'exchange' changes and safeguarding rules, sending confidence ripples through community banks and investment advisers. The shift in posture follows President Donald Trump's commitment to reducing regulatory burdens on markets. In tandem, SEC staff and FINRA dismantled a long-standing 2019 joint statement on broker‑dealer custody of digital asset securities on 15 May, paving the way for regulated intermediaries to offer crypto custody services under established rules. The SEC's deregulatory drive is echoed in recent comments from Uyeda, who in March announced the agency might scrap or significantly amend crypto custody rules introduced during the previous administration. He emphasised a pivot towards 'effective and cost‑efficient regulations that respect the limits of our statutory authority'. Critics caution that this pivot could expose clients to risks. While standards for DeFi governance, custodial integrity, and cybersecurity remain under voluntary frameworks, there are concerns that stripping formal oversight could open institutional and retail investors to vulnerabilities. Legal analysts predict renewed debate over the SEC's authority to classify new financial structures as securities. DeFi proponents, for their part, argue the withdrawal presents an opportunity. With regulatory certainty withdrawn, startups and developers may double down on innovation, integrating hybrid compliance models that rely on decentralised autonomy rather than central oversight. Meanwhile, traditional custodians and broker‑dealers are expected to enter the crypto space more aggressively, now freed from the obligation of specialist 'qualified custodian' status. Remaining questions include whether Congress will move to impose legislative frameworks on digital assets and whether the SEC will pursue fresh proposals under a different legal theory. Commissioner Hester Peirce has signalled support for further dialogue and interpretative guidance, reinforcing a more incremental, consultative regulatory model. The SEC is now scheduled to hold stakeholder forums and public consultations in the coming months. Industry watchers are closely tracking these developments to assess whether the rollback represents a long-term deregulatory reorientation or a temporary reprieve preceding fresh oversight efforts.

Crypto Insight
an hour ago
- Crypto Insight
Chainlink, JPMorgan, Ondo Finance complete crosschain treasury settlement
Chainlink, JPMorgan's Kinexys and Ondo Finance completed a 'first-of-its-kind' crosschain delivery versus payment (DvP) settlement between a permissioned payment network and a public testnet. The test involved Kinexys Digital Payments, a permissioned network operated by JPMorgan and Ondo Chain's testnet, which is focused on real-world asset (RWA) tokenization, Chainlink said in a Thursday announcement. The settlement was coordinated using Chainlink's Runtime Environment (CRE), an offchain compute layer designed for interoperable financial systems. At the center of the transaction was OUSG, Ondo's tokenized US Treasurys fund, which was exchanged for payment via Kinexys' platform. The move comes as TradFi and decentralized finance (DeFi) increasingly converge. With over $23 billion in tokenized RWAs now live on public blockchains, the need for crosschain settlements grows. How was the settlement executed? The recent DvP test involved the exchange of OUSG and a simultaneous fiat payment through Kinexys Digital Payments. RE orchestrated the workflow, verified escrow events on Ondo Chain, initiated payment instructions via Kinexys and coordinated the final settlement. Notably, only transaction instructions crossed between networks. The successful transaction is the first to be executed on the Ondo Chain testnet and represents an expansion of Kinexys' settlement capabilities beyond private chains. 'CRE is highly configurable and can be used to settle different types of DvP transactions of varying complexity, including single-chain and multichain DvP transactions, enabling complex financial activity with reduced counterparty and settlement risk,' Chainlink said. RWA market surges 260% In the first half of 2025, the RWA market surged more than 260%, surpassing $23 billion in total valuation. It was $8.6 billion at the beginning of the year, according to a Binance Research report shared with Cointelegraph. Tokenized private credit led the RWA market boom, accounting for about 58% of the market share, followed by tokenized US Treasury debt, which accounted for 34%. New players also continue to enter the market. On June 5, Pan-European fund manager APS purchased 3 million euros ($3.4 million) in tokenized bonds tied to two Italian residential properties listed on MetaWealth. Source:

Crypto Insight
3 hours ago
- Crypto Insight
USDC stablecoin launches on XRP Ledger
Circle's USDC stablecoin launched on the XRP Ledger (XRPL) on Thursday, bringing the overcollateralized dollar-pegged token to users of the layer-1 blockchain network. According to an announcement from Ripple, the launch of USDC on the platform will enable investors to use XRP as a bridge currency to transfer their stablecoins between decentralized exchanges (DEXs) through an auto-bridging feature. Markus Infanger, the senior vice president of RippleX added: 'Stablecoins are key entry points connecting traditional financial markets with the crypto space — essential for use cases focused on utility rather than speculation.' Support for USDC on the XRPL comes amid a concerted push to establish comprehensive stablecoin regulations in the United States, as the sector swells to over $237 billion in market capitalization with geo-strategic and macroeconomic implications. Stablecoins become the focal point of protecting US dollar salability Overcollateralized stablecoin issuers purchase short-term US Treasury bills to back their digital fiat tokens, collecting the yield from these government securities as profit. A growing number of US lawmakers and officials view stablecoins as a way to mitigate de-dollarization by foreign countries offloading US government debt due to concerns over the creditworthiness of the US government and the declining value of the US dollar. As sovereign powers dump US debt instruments, bond yields spike as investors demand higher interest payments to lend to the government. This, in turn, leads to higher debt service costs for the government, causing the $36 trillion national debt to become even more costly to maintain and further inflating the principal amount owed, creating a vicious cycle of debt monetization to pay back creditors and fund the budget. During the White House Crypto Summit on March 7, US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent promised to prioritize stablecoin development to protect US dollar hegemony by leveraging the demand for stablecoins to increase the salability of the US dollar globally. However, critics of the fiat system like Bitcoin advocate Max Keiser say the plan to shore up declining demand for the US dollar with stablecoins will only delay the inevitable collapse of the dollar but will not save it. Stable tokens backed by gold will outcompete dollar-pegged stablecoins for several reasons, including gold's high stock-to-flow ratio, which protects its value from rapid inflation and price depreciation, according to Keiser. Source: