Late-Q3 research shows institutional crypto is being assessed with caution as allocations are reconsidered across portfolios. Custody, regulation and investor appetite now shape the timing and depth of exposure among professional managers. The survey covers 43 countries and more than 1000 institutional and professional investors.
The Future Finance 2025 report is a 38-page study published by Sygnum that maps sentiment across jurisdictions and segments, and it provides a near-term snapshot of institutional intent. It summarises findings from six themes and captures views from 1000+ institutional and professional investors on risk, regulation and capacity.
Survey timing in late-Q3 focuses attention on near-term allocation moves and trust in custody and compliance frameworks. The study also places a spotlight on High Net Worth Individuals (HNWIs) as a distinct investor cohort driving private-market demand.
In this context, analysts point to regulatory fragmentation as a key constraint on cross-border allocation and on the scalability of institutional programmes. “Regulatory alignment remains the single biggest enabler of institutional scale,” said Sygnum’s head of research. It should be noted that these perspectives reflect the views gathered during the study period.
Managers reported a cautious approach to digital asset allocation, driven by regulatory clarity and infrastructure readiness. As a result, planned exposure remains selective, with many firms favouring established token models and regulated counterparties; that caution also frames institutional interest in custody solutions.
Sygnum frames policy and custody as central levers; institutional custody solutions rank high on the agenda for asset managers and trustees. Meanwhile, the six themes in the report underline governance and operational controls as prerequisites for scale.
Many institutional crypto investors signalled incremental moves rather than wholesale shifts, preferring pilot allocations and segregated mandates. High net worth investors are singled out for bespoke products and direct allocations in private markets, which could alter demand profiles; this bespoke demand may reshape private-market offerings.
Respondents stressed custody, insurance and counterparty risk as determinants of adoption, and called for clearer standards across jurisdictions. However, progress varies by market and by the quality of local regulation.
Market participants emphasised demand for insured, operationally segregated custody offerings that can be integrated into existing back-office workflows. “Custody depth, not just breadth, will determine who captures institutional flows,” said Sygnum’s custody lead.
Note: the report aggregates responses from 1000+ participants across 43 countries; specific regional breakdowns are available in the linked document.
Managers reported a cautious approach to digital asset allocation, driven by regulatory clarity and infrastructure readiness. As a result, planned exposure remains selective, with many firms favouring established token models and regulated counterparties; that caution also frames institutional interest in institutional custody solutions.
The survey covers 43 countries including institutional demand for bitcoin at its peak, which influences the market sentiment globally.
The report also discusses the rise of ethereum institutional purchases which shape the investment landscape.

