Key Takeaways:
Cassie Craddock, Managing Director for the U.K. and Europe at Ripple, doubled down on custody as a key requirement for institutional crypto growth in an April 27 post on X. She pointed to Europe as the clearest example of this shift, where regulated financial institutions are moving into production environments that depend on secure custody to operate digital asset strategies at scale.
Her comments frame custody as the operational backbone for institutional use cases, including payments, tokenization, staking, and treasury management. She tied that view to real activity, noting that Intesa Sanpaolo, Italy’s largest banking group, is using Ripple Custody for its digital asset initiatives. Craddock described it as:
“A clear signal of where European institutional adoption is heading, as well as the standard of infrastructure required to get there.”
Ripple’s April 15 update provides supporting detail, outlining how its custody platform has expanded through integrations with Chainalysis for compliance, Securosys for cloud-based HSM security, and Figment for institutional staking, alongside wallet infrastructure enhancements from Palisade. These additions aim to embed compliance and governance directly into custody workflows instead of relying on fragmented systems.
The combined picture highlights how custody platforms are being structured to meet institutional requirements. Ripple describes an API-driven, modular system that integrates with existing banking infrastructure while supporting secure wallet deployment, distributed key management, and customizable approval controls. Additional capabilities include compliance screening for transactions, stablecoin payment support, and tokenization across multiple blockchains. Cloud-based HSM custody allows institutions to manage cryptographic keys without traditional hardware complexity, while staking services can be offered within the same custody environment. Ripple also pointed to expansion beyond Europe, including a partnership with Kyobo Life Insurance to explore custody and on-chain settlement infrastructure in South Korea.
Craddock’s conclusion reinforces the shift from experimentation to execution. She said:
“The next phase won’t be defined by experimentation; it will be defined by operational maturity. Custody is where that starts.”
Her remarks also align with her recent public statements emphasizing that institutional crypto adoption is already underway through real-world use cases. Together, these positions shift the focus from general adoption narratives to the infrastructure required to sustain them. The central point is that custody systems now define participation, acting as the control layer for crypto assets, tokenized assets, and broader digital asset operations within regulated financial institutions.
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