Franklin Templeton Launches Crypto Unit Amid Market Slump
Franklin Templeton is setting up a standalone cryptocurrency division by acquiring 250 Digital, a firm spun off from venture capital outfit CoinFund earlier this year.
The $1.7 trillion asset manager is making its boldest digital-asset move yet, targeting pension and sovereign wealth funds.
What Franklin Templeton Is Building
The unit will operate under the name Franklin Crypto. Christopher Perkins and Seth Ginns, both former CoinFund executives, will run day-to-day operations. Sandy Kaul, who leads innovation at Franklin, will oversee the group.
Franklin has been in crypto since 2018 and currently employs more than 50 digital asset specialists. The firm already offers a bitcoin ETF and runs a tokenized money-market fund on Binance. This acquisition shifts its strategy from passive products toward actively managed institutional offerings.
Timing matters here. Bitcoin has shed roughly 45% since crossing $126,000 last fall. About $2 trillion has evaporated from total crypto market capitalization. Franklin’s leadership appears to view the downturn as a window to consolidate talent and build infrastructure cheaply.
Paying With Tokens
Perhaps the most unusual aspect is the payment structure. Franklin will use BENJI tokens, backed by its blockchain-based government money fund, to cover part of the purchase price. That makes this one of the first corporate acquisitions partially settled on-chain.
The deal should close by mid-2026. No financial terms were released.
Related Articles
Crypto RWA Perpetuals Challenge TradFi Market Share
Crypto-native perpetual markets tied to real-world assets ( RWA) are rapidly gaining traction against traditional futures. New data shows sharp growth in trading volumes...
Bitcoin Price Trims Gains, But Uptrend Still Holds Strong
Bitcoin price started a strong increase above the $70,500 zone. $BTC is consolidating gains and might aim for more gains above the $71,650 zone....
Cardano price tests $0.25 support as long liquidations mount, will it crash?
Cardano price fell over 5% towards $0.25 on Thursday, paring off a part of its gains seen on the previous day. According to data...
Crypto Built More Rails, but the Next Battle Is Over How Much Work a Dollar Can Do
Most people think the problem with modern finance comes down to fees, spreads, and slow transfers. Those are real, but the deeper issue feels...
