Large Bitcoin mandates show institutions now favor active management, risk controls, and transparency over passive exposure.
A major U.S. investment advisor has made a major move into professional Bitcoin management. Digital asset strategies are drawing deeper interest from traditional firms as infrastructure and oversight continue to improve. Recent activity points to a shift in how advisors approach long-term Bitcoin exposure.
Mandate Signals Growing Institutional Shift Toward Active BTC Management
Digital Wealth Partners (DWP) has transferred $250 million in Bitcoin to Two Prime for professional management. Public disclosures place the mandate among the largest allocations from a traditional advisor to a crypto-focused fund to date.
The advisory firm operates under oversight from the Securities and Exchange Commission. Moreover, the company has spent several months reviewing the move before approving the transfer. The review focused on custody arrangements, risk controls, and past performance.
Management said professional oversight became necessary as the client’s BTC allocations grew larger and more complex.
The decision points to rising acceptance of Bitcoin as a core portfolio asset among institutional investors. It also reflects progress in custody, reporting, and risk controls that now support large Bitcoin mandates at a standard closer to traditional asset management.
Two Prime earned the mandate based on its security standards, transparent reporting, and sole focus on BTC strategies. DWP builds its trading models around Bitcoin’s volatility, aiming to control losses while generating steady, BTC-denominated returns.
In addition, Two Prime operates a large lending business and stands among the world’s biggest providers of bitcoin-backed loans. Clients include family offices, corporate treasuries, and market participants who mine the OG coin.
Active Bitcoin Strategies Gain Ground Among Institutional Investors
Two Prime Lending, the firm’s credit division, ranks among the largest Bitcoin-secured lenders globally. The department provides liquidity while maintaining strict collateral standards.
Expansion of the mandate builds on an existing relationship between the two firms. Funds will run through a separately managed account aimed at lower-volatility returns measured in Bitcoin rather than U.S. dollars. The structure supports long-term BTC accumulation while helping limit drawdowns during periods of market volatility.
Executives from both firms said client expectations are shifting. Investors increasingly want more than passive Bitcoin exposure. Demand now centers on disciplined strategies, clear reporting, and risk controls comparable to those used across traditional asset classes.
Alexander S. Blume, Chief Executive Officer of Two Prime, said the expanded partnership reflects trust built over time. He noted that the firm’s focus remains on performance, risk control, and close client relationships as Bitcoin becomes a larger part of institutional portfolios.
The Chief Executive Officer of Digital Wealth Partners, Max Kahn, said partner selection required careful review of transparency and operational standards. He added that Two Prime’s approach offers clients a way to grow Bitcoin positions while seeking protection during periods of sharp market movement.
As Bitcoin adoption broadens, experienced advisors and specialized managers are becoming central to how institutions participate in digital asset markets.