The race among crypto custodians to secure high-end clients is growing fiercer by the day.
Ledger, the France-based wallet and custody startup, is ramping up the number of cryptocurrencies it supports to meet the demand for multi-coin solutions, particularly from institutional investors. Â
Revealed exclusively to CoinDesk, the company will add support for new crypto assets on the first Tuesday of each month, starting in August, with a goal of having more than 100 supported by the end of 2019. Currently, Ledgerâs products and services handle only about two dozen tokens, and this week itâs adding support for tron (TRX) and zcoin (XZC).
The move is yet another sign of how the cryptocurrency industry is rapidly evolving, with an ever-widening array of assets to choose from and big-money players nosing around for investment opportunities and influencing companiesâ business decisions.
While Ledger, founded in 2014, is primarily known for its hardware wallet and corresponding app for individual bitcoin users, CEO Eric Larcheveque cited its newer business lines â which offer custody services to hedge funds and other big players â as the driver behind this âToken Tuesdaysâ initiative.Â
âIf we want to sign those [institutional] customers, we donât have a choice,â Larcheveque told CoinDesk. âWe have to support the top 100 cryptos, minimum.â
For similar reasons, BitGo recently added support for 57 ethereum-based assets to its custody services for institutions. Meanwhile, thousands of wealthy accredited investors are on a waiting list for the crypto key management startup Casa, which is scheduled to release its self-managed bitcoin solution in August and eventually add other tokens.
In turn, however, Larcheveque predicted offering custodial support for a wider range of tokens could bring would-be whales off the sidelines, saying:
âThis will allow hundreds of hedge funds to deploy their capital into crypto, and enable all these other financial institutions to move billions into crypto.â
Further, Ledger president Pascal Gauthier said bringing traditional players into the wider crypto ecosystem would bolster bitcoinâs real-world value, even if these investors ultimately buy other crypto assets. After all, the worldâs largest cryptocurrency is still one of the largest liquidity conduits for cashing out tokens.
More broadly, âinstitutions coming into this industry means that there is even more trust and it brings more value to the industry,â Gauthier said.
As Ledger courts institutions, it aims to do so in a way that enhances the hardware walletâs utility for retail investors as well.
âI would say that the major drive for crypto integration, in the end, comes from the needs of our enterprise customers,â said Larcheveque. âAt the same time, it profits our hardware wallet users. Itâs a virtuous circle.â
For example, this week the startup also unveiled an upgraded version of the hardware walletâs companion app. Unlike its predecessor, which was really several apps in one, the new Ledger Live automatically pushes updates to all parts of the app, so the company can add support for new tokens faster. Â
Now, itâs much easier to imagine adding dozens of cryptos in just one year to meet Ledgerâs business goals. At the same time, individual users can now manage different assets in one place rather than switching from one app to another.
âWe really want to cover the maximum amount of cryptocurrencies,â said Larcheveque. âThe Live [app] is the first step in this direction because it will give us a new foundation, a new platform, where we can add as much crypto as we want.â
App usage is growing faster than demand for Ledgerâs hardware wallets, of which the company has sold over one million units. Larchevêque said the app, which can be used without the wallet, grew from 100,000 monthly users in November 2017 to 500,000 monthly users today. Â
Open-source tools for Ledger Live also allow external communities to build support features for their favorite crypto. âThen we can publish them [support features] after review,â Larcheveque said. âThanks to the community work by all these developers, we can scale much faster by adding new cryptos.â
Indeed, according to Tronâs head of engineering, Tian Han, Ledgerâs new tron support was spurred in part by user-submitted code, although his organization also provided financial assistance.Â
âUsers got together to form a team to build the implementation. Tron employees werenât involved aside from giving a grant,â Han told CoinDesk. âWe also awarded an $80,000 grant to the Ledger Wallet integration team members, and have future grants planned for Trezor Integration as well.â
To some, the rush to offer token custody solutions to Wall Street incumbents may seem hard to square with the crypto communityâs âbe your own bankâ philosophy.
But Ledger actually has two business lines targeting institutional investors. One is a series of partnerships with organizations such as Nomura Bank in Japan, which uses Ledgerâs tools for full-custody services, more akin to a traditional deposit.
The other is called the Vault, an enterprise-grade custody solution for teams at an institution, like traders at a hedge fund, to self-manage crypto assets, an arrangement thatâs more in line with the crypto communityâs ethos. This multi-signature wallet is connected to many individual hardware devices for each team member.
âThey are being their own bank just like with the Nano S [Ledgerâs hardware wallet] you are being your own bank as an individual,â Gauthier said. âThe different managers that are signing off on the transactions will all have a deviceâ
So far, this self-custody approach appears to be rare, though. Typically, institutions donât want to manage their own private keys, and even some that do so donât want to be completely self-reliant.
âThe best solution is I have a key, my partner has a key, and some guy that Iâve never heard before has a key,â said Travis Kling, co-founder of Ikigai Asset Management, a hedge fund that uses BitGo in this way.
In the view of Jameson Lopp, an infrastructure engineer at Casa, institutions are applying âold worldâ ideas about custody to these new digital assets.
Although full-custody services donât align with Loppâs philosophy of self-reliance, he acknowledged the need for a spectrum of services and healthy competition between companies like Casa, Ledger, and BitGo. He told CoinDesk:
âItâs perfectly fine if people choose to trust a third party. But the whole reason we got into this system in the first place is that people donât have to do that if they donât want to.â
Pascal Gauthier (L) and Eric Larcheveque (R) image courtesy of Ledger