BitGo Holdings unveils DeFi vault solutions for institutional clients

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BitGo Holdings wants to make DeFi palatable for the suit-and-tie crowd. The digital asset infrastructure firm, publicly listed as BTGO on the NYSE, announced plans for a new DeFi vault offering designed to let institutional clients access onchain yield strategies while keeping their assets inside a regulated custodial framework.

How the vault structure works

The new vault products will allow eligible institutions to tap into third-party onchain vault products and lending strategies. Assets within the vault products will reside in BitGo Bank & Trust, the company’s qualified custodian. Vault receipt tokens, which represent a client’s position in these strategies, will be safeguarded through institutional controls and real-time monitoring.

Morpho, a decentralized lending protocol, is the core infrastructure partner for the initiative. Independent risk managers will establish strategy parameters, exposure limits, and risk controls for each vault product. This means BitGo isn’t making the yield-chasing decisions itself. Instead, third parties handle execution strategies and return generation within guardrails set by dedicated risk professionals.

Building on a DeFi integration spree

This vault announcement didn’t come out of nowhere. BitGo has been methodically layering DeFi capabilities into its platform for months.

On October 1, 2025, the company launched a Narval integration that provided custody-native access to decentralized finance protocols. Narval serves as an institutional gateway, essentially a bridge that lets custodied assets interact with DeFi without the typical operational friction of moving tokens between wallets and protocols.

Then on June 9, 2026, BitGo expanded that gateway with direct access to prominent protocols including Aave, Spark, and Tesseract.

BitGo has signaled plans to incorporate additional infrastructure providers and risk managers over time, suggesting the vault program will expand beyond Morpho into a multi-protocol ecosystem.

Why institutions care now

Traditional asset managers face a cascade of operational hurdles when trying to access DeFi directly. Custody requirements, regulatory reporting obligations, internal risk frameworks, and counterparty due diligence processes all clash with DeFi’s permissionless, pseudonymous nature.

BitGo’s model attempts to solve this by keeping everything within a qualified custody environment. Assets don’t leave the trust company. Risk parameters are set by independent professionals. And the entire structure operates under the regulatory umbrella of a publicly listed entity, which means audited financials and SEC oversight come standard.

Investors watching BTGO should note that the company has not disclosed specific performance metrics or a concrete launch timeline for the vault products.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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