Coinbase’s Deribit and Komainu Join Forces for Institutional In-Custody Crypto Trading
By Ian Allison, AI Boost|Edited by Sheldon Reback
Oct 22, 2025, 9:56 a.m.

- Institutions will be able to trade derivatives on Deribit while holding assets securely with Komainu.
- Keeping assets in custody aims to cut counterparty risk and improve market access.
- Deal reflects growing institutional demand for compliant, off-exchange crypto trading.
Deribit, the crypto derivatives exchange acquired by Coinbase (COIN) earlier this year, is working with digital asset custodian Komainu to offer institutions the ability to trade continuously without moving assets off custody, the companies said on Wednesday.
The agreement links Deribit to Komainu Connect, a platform that manages collateral between trading venues and custodians. Institutional clients can keep their funds entirely within Komainu’s regulated custody structure while executing trades on Deribit. This setup aims to reduce counterparty and settlement risks, long-standing concerns among professional crypto traders.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW
Like the rest of the digital asset industry, crypto derivatives are edging towards mainstream financial adoption. In a recent interview, Coinbase said it expects a wave of institutions from Europe and the U.S. to enter the space.
Komainu, backed by Laser Digital and linked to Japanese bank Nomura, offers on-chain, bankruptcy-remote segregated wallets and supports a range of collateral types, including tokenized Treasury funds like BUIDL and staked ether (sETH). Both companies said the integration is designed to meet increasing institutional demand for secure and compliant digital asset trading.
“Clients want the highest level of security and efficiency,” said Jean-David Péquignot, Deribit’s chief commercial officer. “Partnering with Komainu gives them both.”
AI Disclaimer: Parts of this article were generated with the assistance from AI tools and reviewed by our editorial team to ensure accuracy and adherence to our standards. For more information, see CoinDesk’s full AI Policy.
More For You

Stablecoin payment volumes have grown to $19.4B year-to-date in 2025. OwlTing aims to capture this market by developing payment infrastructure that processes transactions in seconds for fractions of a cent.
More For You
By Jamie Crawley|Edited by Sheldon Reback
31 minutes ago
The deal, terms of which were not disclosed, will allow FalconX to expand beyond market making and liquidity services into issuing crypto ETFs.
What to know:
- Digital asset prime broker FalconX agreed to acquire crypto asset manager 21Shares, the Wall Street Journal reported.
- The deal, terms of which remain undisclosed, will allow FalconX to expand beyond market making and liquidity services into issuing crypto ETFs.
-
Back to menu
Prices
-
Back to menu
-
Back to menu
Indices -
Back to menu
Research
-
Back to menu
Consensus 2026 -
Back to menu
Sponsored
-
Back to menu
Videos -
Back to menu
-
Back to menu
-
Back to menu
Webinars
Select Language