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Bordier Raises Digital Assets Game
Tom Burroughes
2 March 2021
Swiss bank announced yesterday that clients can buy, hold and trade cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin over Sygnum’s business-to-business banking platform which the bank has worked with, showing how traditional lenders are pushing into the space. Separately, read this article about Bordier's move into Vietnam's wealth management market.
This partnership enables Bordier’s execution-only clients to play in the digital assets sector. The move comes at a time when bitcoin prices, for example, have been strong – although off their recent highs yesterday. (As of Monday afternoon in London, bitcoin fetched more than $48,400. Source: Coinbase.) Figures in the wealth management sector say that digital assets are becoming more mainstream. (We are hosting virtual webinars on the issues here and here.)
Geneva-based Bordier has integrated Sygnum’s B2B banking platform, allowing Bordier clients to trade bitcoin, Ethereum, Bitcoin Cash and Tezos. The offering will be extended as clients become more at ease with the simplicity of the new service.
“We have seen increasing demand from our clients to diversify into alternative asset classes such as digital assets. By partnering with Sygnum Bank, we are providing our clients with a one-stop, integrated solution while empowering them to invest in this new, high growth asset class with complete trust,” Evrard Bordier, Bordier & Cie’s managing partner, said.
Sygnum covers technical infrastructure and compliance as a service, research and sales education as well as access to a range of digital asset products.
In this partnership, Sygnum provided digital asset specialist expertise and a B2B banking platform which includes safekeeping of private keys, selection of and connectivity to liquidity providers, digital asset AML and transaction monitoring.
Bordier isn’t the only Swiss banking firm playing in the digital assets space. In January 2020, brought out its Digital Asset Vault, enabling clients to buy, hold and transfer such assets within the bank infrastructure.