Wall Street’s blockchain race just got more expensive: Digital Asset, the developer behind Canton Network, has raised $355 million to expand blockchain infrastructure built for banks, asset managers, trading firms, and regulated market workflows.
The round was led by a16z crypto and included major finance names such as ABN Amro, Apollo Funds, BNP Paribas, Citadel Securities, HSBC, SBI Group, and the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority through a subsidiary, according to CoinDesk. The raise topped a previously reported $300 million target tied to a $2 billion valuation, CoinDesk reported.
Digital Asset’s $355 million raise turns Canton into a better-funded Wall Street blockchain contender
The thesis is simple: if capital markets move more workflows onchain, the winning infrastructure will need to look less like retail crypto and more like regulated market plumbing. That’s the lane Canton is chasing.
Digital Asset said the funding will support its push to bring capital markets onchain through Canton Network, a blockchain designed for institutions that need privacy, compliance, scale, and interoperability. The company’s pitch is that banks and trading firms can issue and trade tokenized real-world assets, including bonds, loans, and funds, on shared infrastructure without exposing sensitive activity to everyone on the network.
"For capital markets to move onchain, institutions need infrastructure that reflects how they actually operate – with privacy, compliance, scale, and interoperability built in from the start," Digital Asset co-founder and CEO Yuval Rooz said.
That line explains why this raise matters more than the headline number. Canton isn’t trying to win by being the most open venue for every crypto user. It’s trying to win regulated finance, where the blockers are legal control, confidentiality, auditability, and integration with existing market systems.
The strongest counterpoint is also obvious: funding does not equal usage. Big-bank pilots have a long history of producing press releases before production volume. XOOMAR analysis: the real signal here is not that Digital Asset found crypto investors. It’s that banks, asset managers, trading firms, exchanges, and infrastructure providers are willing to back a specific institutional blockchain architecture with fresh capital.
That fits the tension we highlighted in Blockchain's Wall Street Takeover Hits the ERP Wall: institutional blockchain adoption often runs into the dull but decisive work of connecting new rails to old systems.
Tempo and Arc show the institution-focused blockchain race is heating up
Canton’s raise lands in a crowded funding moment, not in isolation. CoinDesk noted that Stripe and Paradigm’s Tempo payments chain reportedly raised $500 million last year at a $5 billion valuation, while Circle Internet’s Arc blockchain raised $222 million at a $3 billion valuation with backing from BlackRock, Apollo Funds, a16z crypto, and ARK Invest.
That comparison matters because these projects are circling related budgets. Banks, payment firms, asset managers, and market operators are weighing which blockchain rails can handle settlement, stablecoin flows, tokenized assets, collateral movement, and regulated workflows without creating compliance headaches.
| Project | Reported raise | Reported valuation | Core institutional angle |
|---|---|---|---|
| Canton Network, Digital Asset | $355 million | Previously reported $2 billion valuation target | Tokenized assets, privacy, regulated capital markets workflows |
| Tempo, Stripe and Paradigm | $500 million | $5 billion | Payments chain for institutional and payment use cases |
| Arc, Circle Internet | $222 million | $3 billion | Blockchain tied to stablecoin and regulated finance infrastructure |
The current pitch is sharper than earlier crypto infrastructure cycles. The focus is less on speculative retail activity and more on financial operations that already exist: settlement, collateral mobility, payments, tokenized funds, and post-trade workflows.
Canton’s challenge is that “bank-friendly” is no longer a niche position. Tempo and Arc show that major players with deep distribution are also building for regulated finance. XOOMAR analysis: Digital Asset’s $355 million raise gives Canton more room to compete, but it also confirms that the cost of owning Wall Street’s blockchain layer is rising.
This is the same broader pressure reshaping payments and banking infrastructure, including the fee and rail debates we covered in Open Banking Payments Crush Card Fees, Not Wallets.
Canton’s privacy-first design is the core product, not a side feature
Canton’s strongest argument is that Wall Street can’t run sensitive markets on fully transparent rails. Banks and asset managers cannot expose trading positions, client flows, settlement details, or regulated product activity to every network participant.
Digital Asset says Canton combines public blockchain traits, including decentralization, with safeguards required by traditional finance. In plain terms, the goal is shared infrastructure where participants can transact and settle across applications while controlling who sees what.
That design targets use cases where the value of shared rails is obvious but the privacy problem is severe:
- Tokenized assets: Bonds, loans, funds, and other real-world assets issued and traded onchain.
- Collateral mobility: Faster movement of eligible collateral between institutions and venues.
- Settlement: Shared records for trades and payments where timing and reconciliation matter.
- Post-trade workflows: Clearing, confirmations, and operational processes that often span multiple firms.
- Regulated applications: Financial workflows that need permissions, audit trails, and legal control.
The official announcement from Digital Asset said the company plans to use the capital to expand offerings across Canton, deepen engagement with developers and financial institutions, and support network growth. It also said FT Partners served as exclusive strategic and financial advisor to Digital Asset on the transaction.
"One of the most compelling blockchain opportunities is no longer theoretical; it is emerging as real-world assets and institutional workflows move onchain," Ali Yahya, general partner at a16z crypto, said in a statement. "Digital Asset has built one of the clearest examples of blockchain product-market fit in regulated finance."
The counterpoint remains hard to dodge. A purpose-built network can remove some objections, but it can’t force banks to move critical workflows onto new rails. Risk committees, compliance teams, supervisors, vendors, and counterparties all get a vote.
The real scoreboard will be production volume, not investor logos
The next test for Canton is conversion: new bank integrations, live transactions, tokenized asset issuance, liquidity, and clearer participation from market infrastructure firms. Investor lists can show confidence. They don’t prove that markets will shift.
Regulated finance moves slowly because the workflows are high-stakes and deeply connected. A tokenized bond or fund product is only useful at scale if enough issuers, custodians, dealers, investors, and infrastructure providers can interact with it under rules they trust.
Canton now has stronger funding and a heavyweight backer in a16z crypto, which Digital Asset said will provide support across development, policy, and research. That helps. It doesn’t settle the competitive fight with Tempo, Arc, public blockchains, or private settlement networks chasing the same institutional budgets.
XOOMAR analysis: the $355 million raise is a clear vote that Wall Street’s onchain buildout is no longer a side project. The practical watch item is whether Canton can turn that money and institutional backing into repeatable production workflows. If usage stays trapped in pilots, the round will read like another expensive bet. If live volume follows, Canton becomes one of the clearest tests of whether regulated finance is ready to move core market infrastructure onchain.
Disclaimer: This XOOMAR analysis is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not financial, investment, legal, tax, or professional advice. It does not provide buy, sell, hold, price-target, portfolio, or personalized recommendations. Verify information independently and consult qualified professionals before making decisions.
The Bottom Line
- Digital Asset’s $355 million raise signals growing institutional demand for blockchain infrastructure built for regulated finance.
- Canton Network is positioning itself as a privacy- and compliance-focused alternative to retail-oriented crypto networks.
- Backing from major banks, asset managers, and trading firms suggests tokenized capital markets are moving closer to mainstream adoption.
Originally published on XOOMAR. For more news and analysis, visit XOOMAR.
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