Kraken Plugs Institutional Liquidity into Europe’s Banking Rails via Trever Integration

Tuesday, 30/06/2026 | 10:25 GMT by Tanya Chepkova
  • Kraken Prime is now available inside Trever, giving European banks and brokers easier access to crypto execution and custody.
  • The deal shows institutional crypto distribution moving from standalone venues into the operating systems banks and brokers already use.
Kraken (shutterstock)

Kraken has integrated Kraken Prime into Trever, giving European banks and brokers a way to execute and settle institutional crypto trades inside their existing operating environment.

The partnership expands Kraken’s institutional infrastructure strategy by moving its liquidity and custody services deeper into the back office of traditional finance. Banks can access crypto liquidity without rebuilding workflows around an exchange interface.

Reducing Operational Drag

Many European institutions still manage digital asset activity through a fragmented setup: one provider for execution, another for custody, and internal systems for accounting, reconciliation and audit trails. That creates cost, operational risk and compliance friction.

The Trever integration is designed to reduce the complexity. Banks using Trever can route execution across more than 20 global liquidity venues, settle into Kraken’s qualified custody and keep a single auditable record inside their existing system.

“Trever’s clients are some of Europe’s most established financial institutions,” said Gurpreet Oberoi, Head of Kraken Institutional. “By bringing Kraken Prime into their workflow, we’re giving them access to execution quality and qualified custody without the operational drag.”

A MiCA-Ready Distribution Strategy

The timing also reflects broader changes in the European market. As MiCA raises the bar for governance, custody, reporting and operational discipline, crypto firms are under pressure to integrate more easily into institutional operating environments.

Kraken has recently expanded its regulated infrastructure across several markets. Its parent company, Payward, secured a $200 million investment from Deutsche Börse, obtained a MiCA licence from the Central Bank of Ireland and added MiFID II derivatives coverage through its Cyprus-regulated broker.

Outside Europe, the company also acquired Bitnomial for $550 million to expand its US derivatives business and Reap for $600 million to strengthen its global stablecoin infrastructure.

Together, those regulatory approvals and acquisitions have significantly expanded Kraken’s institutional offering across trading, custody and payments.

Hans-Juergen Griesbacher, CEO of Trever. Source: LinkedIn
Hans-Juergen Griesbacher, CEO of Trever. Source: LinkedIn

What This Means for Brokers

The Trever integration points to a practical shift in digital asset adoption. The market is moving away from the DIY phase, where institutions assembled trading, custody, compliance and reporting infrastructure from multiple providers.

“Banks and brokers want to run digital asset operations at high institutional standards, MiCA-conform and without assembling infrastructure piece by piece,” said Hans-Juergen Griesbacher, CEO of Trever.

By embedding Kraken Prime directly into Trever’s operating layer, the integration allows banks to access institutional crypto liquidity and custody without changing their existing operating environment.

For competing institutional providers, the focus extends beyond trading volume to workflow integration, becoming part of the operational infrastructure that banks and brokers already use every day.

Kraken has integrated Kraken Prime into Trever, giving European banks and brokers a way to execute and settle institutional crypto trades inside their existing operating environment.

The partnership expands Kraken’s institutional infrastructure strategy by moving its liquidity and custody services deeper into the back office of traditional finance. Banks can access crypto liquidity without rebuilding workflows around an exchange interface.

Reducing Operational Drag

Many European institutions still manage digital asset activity through a fragmented setup: one provider for execution, another for custody, and internal systems for accounting, reconciliation and audit trails. That creates cost, operational risk and compliance friction.

The Trever integration is designed to reduce the complexity. Banks using Trever can route execution across more than 20 global liquidity venues, settle into Kraken’s qualified custody and keep a single auditable record inside their existing system.

“Trever’s clients are some of Europe’s most established financial institutions,” said Gurpreet Oberoi, Head of Kraken Institutional. “By bringing Kraken Prime into their workflow, we’re giving them access to execution quality and qualified custody without the operational drag.”

A MiCA-Ready Distribution Strategy

The timing also reflects broader changes in the European market. As MiCA raises the bar for governance, custody, reporting and operational discipline, crypto firms are under pressure to integrate more easily into institutional operating environments.

Kraken has recently expanded its regulated infrastructure across several markets. Its parent company, Payward, secured a $200 million investment from Deutsche Börse, obtained a MiCA licence from the Central Bank of Ireland and added MiFID II derivatives coverage through its Cyprus-regulated broker.

Outside Europe, the company also acquired Bitnomial for $550 million to expand its US derivatives business and Reap for $600 million to strengthen its global stablecoin infrastructure.

Together, those regulatory approvals and acquisitions have significantly expanded Kraken’s institutional offering across trading, custody and payments.

Hans-Juergen Griesbacher, CEO of Trever. Source: LinkedIn
Hans-Juergen Griesbacher, CEO of Trever. Source: LinkedIn

What This Means for Brokers

The Trever integration points to a practical shift in digital asset adoption. The market is moving away from the DIY phase, where institutions assembled trading, custody, compliance and reporting infrastructure from multiple providers.

“Banks and brokers want to run digital asset operations at high institutional standards, MiCA-conform and without assembling infrastructure piece by piece,” said Hans-Juergen Griesbacher, CEO of Trever.

By embedding Kraken Prime directly into Trever’s operating layer, the integration allows banks to access institutional crypto liquidity and custody without changing their existing operating environment.

For competing institutional providers, the focus extends beyond trading volume to workflow integration, becoming part of the operational infrastructure that banks and brokers already use every day.

About the Author: Tanya Chepkova
Tanya Chepkova
  • 259 Articles
  • 1 Follower
About the Author: Tanya Chepkova
Tanya Chepkova is a News Editor at Finance Magnates with more than 16 years of experience in financial journalism, covering forex, crypto, and digital asset markets. Her work spans daily industry reporting and data-driven, long-form explainers focused on market structure, trading models, and regulatory shifts. Before joining Finance Magnates, she led the editorial team of a cryptocurrency-focused media outlet for six years. Her reporting combines analytical depth with clear storytelling, with particular attention to how structural changes in trading, stablecoin infrastructure, and emerging products such as prediction markets reshape the broader financial ecosystem. She covers global developments and provides additional insight into CIS markets. Areas of Coverage: Crypto and digital asset markets Prediction markets Stablecoins and cross-border payments Industry analysis and long-form explainers
  • 259 Articles
  • 1 Follower

More from the Author

CryptoCurrency

!"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|} !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}