- Kraken and Maple have launched an onchain warehouse facility to support institutional crypto-backed lending.
- The structure adapts a financing model widely used in traditional asset-backed credit markets.
- The facility allows Kraken to expand OTC lending while Maple investors gain exposure to senior secured crypto credit.
- The partnership reflects a broader shift toward institutional-grade infrastructure in digital asset lending.
Institutional crypto lending is moving beyond simple collateralized loans as exchanges and decentralized finance firms experiment with financing structures borrowed from traditional capital markets.
Kraken and onchain asset manager Maple have introduced a warehouse financing facility that funds crypto-backed loans using an onchain legal and operational framework. While warehouse financing has long supported industries such as mortgages, auto loans and consumer credit, its application to blockchain-based lending remains relatively new.
The facility will provide USDC liquidity for Kraken’s over-the-counter lending desk, which serves institutional investors, trading firms and large digital asset holders. Instead of selling Bitcoin or Ethereum to raise capital, eligible borrowers can use their crypto as collateral to obtain financing.
Unlike conventional crypto lending agreements that often rely on direct bilateral relationships, the new structure introduces multiple layers of risk management commonly seen in traditional securitized finance.
Maple x @krakenfx
We’ve brought asset-backed finance onchain, closing an institutional-grade warehouse facility for Kraken.
The result: Kraken’s OTC clients access liquidity against their digital asset holdings, Maple’s lenders access senior overcollateralized credit… pic.twitter.com/ntCf2d9O1j
— Maple (@maplefinance) June 25, 2026
Announcing the partnership on June 25, Maple said the new facility brings institutional asset-backed finance onchain to support Kraken’s crypto-backed lending business.
Traditional Credit Structure Meets Blockchain
At the center of the transaction is a bankruptcy-remote special purpose vehicle (SPV), a legal entity designed to isolate loan assets from the balance sheets of participating companies.
Under the arrangement:
- Maple supplies senior financing through the SPV.
- Kraken originates and services the loans while retaining the junior, first-loss position.
- Kraken Financial, the exchange’s regulated Wyoming-chartered custody entity, safeguards collateral.
- Independent administrator Zaria oversees the SPV.
The design allows collateral balances and loan performance to be tracked onchain while preserving legal protections familiar to institutional credit investors. Although neither company disclosed the facility’s size, the structure closely resembles warehouse financing arrangements that banks and specialty lenders have used for decades before packaging loans into larger investment products.
Why the Partnership Matters
The launch comes as institutional demand for crypto-backed financing gradually recovers following the collapse of several centralized crypto lenders in 2022. Those failures exposed weaknesses in unsecured lending, opaque balance sheets and concentrated counterparty risk. Since then, many institutional participants have shifted toward over collateralized lending models supported by stronger legal protections and transparent collateral management.
Rather than introducing a new lending product, Kraken and Maple appear to be focusing on improving how institutional loans are funded. For Kraken, the warehouse facility provides additional lending capacity without requiring equivalent growth in its own balance-sheet capital. Maple’s lending participants gain access to a senior secured credit strategy backed primarily by Bitcoin and Ethereum collateral, offering a different risk profile from unsecured institutional loans.
Maple’s Institutional Strategy
Founded in 2019, Maple initially built its reputation through institutional crypto lending before restructuring its business after the broader crypto credit downturn.
Today the platform focuses on overcollateralized lending, structured credit and tokenized yield products aimed at institutional investors. The Kraken transaction represents another step in Maple’s effort to position blockchain infrastructure as a foundation for institutional fixed-income markets rather than retail-focused DeFi lending.
The company has increasingly emphasized real-world credit structures, legal safeguards and transparent reporting instead of relying solely on decentralized lending pools.
Market Context
The partnership also reflects broader institutional interest in combining traditional financial infrastructure with blockchain settlement. Large financial institutions have expanded work on tokenized assets, regulated stablecoins and onchain settlement systems over the past year, while exchanges have sought new revenue streams beyond spot trading.
The announcement also comes as Kraken pauses IPO plans amid challenging market conditions despite its reported $20 billion valuation. Even as the exchange delays its public listing, it continues to expand its institutional business through partnerships such as the new onchain lending facility with Maple.
Although the long-term adoption of onchain warehouse financing remains uncertain, the Kraken-Maple transaction demonstrates how established structured finance models are beginning to appear in digital asset markets. If the framework proves scalable, similar facilities could emerge across institutional lending platforms seeking more efficient funding while maintaining protections expected by professional investors.














