YZi Labs Invests in BitGo as Crypto Custody Firm Lists on NYSE
Key Highlights BitGo makes its debut on the NYSE, marking a milestone for regulated crypto infrastructure and institutional adoption. YZi Labs participates in the IPO as an institutional investor, signaling...

Key Highlights
- BitGo makes its debut on the NYSE, marking a milestone for regulated crypto infrastructure and institutional adoption.
- YZi Labs participates in the IPO as an institutional investor, signaling growing confidence in infrastructure-focused crypto firms.
- The company provides secure custody, staking, and stablecoin services, catering primarily to institutional clients rather than retail investors.
BitGo, one of the longest-running digital asset custody firms, made its public market debut this week with a listing on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). Among the institutional investors taking part in the initial public offering (IPO) was YZi Labs, the firm previously known as Binance Labs.
Its participation reflects a broader shift in where serious capital is moving within the crypto space, away from speculation and toward infrastructure.
The listing comes at a moment when the crypto industry is still working to restore confidence after years marked by sharp market swings, major failures and increased regulatory pressure.
Unlike trading platforms or token issuers, BitGo operates in a quieter part of the market. Its work sits behind the scenes, focused on custody, security and the core systems institutions rely on to hold and manage digital assets.
A custodian that grew with the industry
BitGo was founded in the early years of Bitcoin, at a time when secure storage was one of the biggest unresolved issues in the space. The company built its reputation by focusing almost entirely on asset security, well before institutional custody became a mainstream requirement.
Over time, BitGo moved past being just a storage provider. As interest from institutions picked up, the company widened its scope beyond custody. It introduced services such as staking and stablecoin infrastructure, slowly shifting its role toward supporting large financial players rather than catering to retail users.
Today, BitGo says it manages close to $82 billion in assets and works with over 5,100 institutional clients around the world. Its operations span multiple regulatory markets, including the United States, Europe, the Middle East and parts of Asia, highlighting how global its client base has become.
In an industry where security breaches have repeatedly wiped out billions of dollars, BitGo’s decade-long record without a major hack has become one of its defining credentials.
Why YZi Labs entered the picture
YZi Labs, previously known as Binance Labs, has repositioned itself in recent years as a long-term investor focused on infrastructure rather than speculative crypto projects. Its participation in BitGo’s IPO reflects that shift.
Ella Zhang, Head of YZi Labs, pointed to BitGo’s technical foundation and regulatory posture as key reasons behind the investment.
“BitGo has maintained a hack-free security record for over a decade, a testament to the technical foundation laid by its inventor and CEO, Mike Belshe – not only a Bitcoin OG but a pioneer architect of the modern web through his early work at Netscape and Google Chrome,” she said.
“As the digital asset industry matures, BitGo’s regulated, institutional-grade infrastructure has become a critical competitive advantage. With $82 billion AOP, BitGo is a corner-stone asset. We are committed to providing the strategic resources necessary to fuel its next phase of global growth as a public company.”
The investment does not involve operational control but signals confidence in regulated digital asset infrastructure at a time when regulators are tightening oversight globally.
What BitGo actually does
Unlike exchanges that depend on trading volumes, BitGo’s business is built around custody and backend infrastructure. Its work largely stays out of the public eye but plays a central role in how institutions hold and manage digital assets.
Its offerings include secure custody for institutions, staking services that allow firms to generate returns on their holdings, and infrastructure that supports the issuance of stablecoins by banks and enterprises.
Because of this setup, BitGo’s business is less affected by short-term market swings and more closely linked to the steady, long-term adoption of digital assets by institutions.
As banks, asset managers and large funds look at tokenisation and blockchain-based settlement, custody has emerged as one of the biggest bottlenecks. That shift has pushed firms like BitGo into a more important position than they held during earlier phases of the crypto market.
A public listing at a sensitive moment
BitGo’s IPO comes at a cautious time for the industry. Following the collapse of several high-profile crypto companies earlier in the decade, regulators have placed much heavier emphasis on compliance, transparency and the separation of customer assets. These are no longer best practices, they are expectations.
A public listing adds another layer of accountability. Regular disclosures, audits, and ongoing regulatory oversight force companies to operate in the open, something much of the crypto sector has historically avoided. For institutional investors, that level of visibility is often a basic requirement before committing capital.
Seen in that light, BitGo’s market debut is less about hype and more about where the industry now stands. It reflects a stage where infrastructure matters more than momentum.
What this could mean going forward
For institutions, the listing offers a clearer view into how crypto infrastructure businesses actually operate and generate revenue. For regulators, the listing offers a real-world look at how a digital asset company operates when it is subject to public market rules and ongoing scrutiny.
For the industry more broadly, it points to a shift away from fast, speculative growth and toward a slower, compliance-first model built around structure and oversight.
Whether other infrastructure firms choose to take the same route remains to be seen. But the move reflects a wider change taking place in crypto, where custody, regulation and risk management are starting to carry as much weight as innovation itself.
As digital assets continue to move closer to traditional finance, the companies working quietly behind the scenes may end up shaping the next phase of the market more than the high-profile trading platforms ever did.
Also Read: BitGo Tops IPO Range at $18, Aims to Raise $212.8M
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