Grayscale Investments Established in 2013, Grayscale Investments is a digital currency asset manager. It offers funds privately for institutional and accredited investors and publicly traded products. Grayscale was the world's largest asset manager for digital currency, as of December 2021, with more than $50 billion in assets under management. Grayscale also manages the Grayscale Bitcoin Investment Trust (), which was the first publicly quoted security solely invested in the price of bitcoin upon its launch in 2013. Grayscale Bitcoin Trust was approved for public trading by the U.S.
Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) in 2015. On January 21, 2020, Grayscale Bitcoin Trust became the first digital currency financial product to become a
Securities and Exchange Commission reporting company. In 2018, Grayscale launched the Grayscale Digital Large Cap Fund, which allows a customer to invest in a group of prominent digital currencies. The fund was approved to trade on public markets by the FINRA in October 2019. In May 2022, it was reported that Grayscale would list an
exchange-traded fund (ETF) for the first time in Europe. The ETF was said to be made up of companies representing the "Future of Finance", and would begin trading on May 17. In January 2024, the SEC granted approval for Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC) to convert into a spot Bitcoin ETF, along with ten other products including BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust and Fidelity’s Wise Origin Bitcoin Trust. Following that decision, in July 2024 the SEC granted approval for Grayscale's ETHE, along with seven other spot Ethereum ETFs including Bitwise's Ethereum ETF and VanEck's Ethereum Trust. Grayscale also received approval from the SEC for its mini Ethereum exchange-traded fund in July 2024. Grayscale CEO Michael Sonnenshein stepped down in May 2024, and it was announced that Peter Mintzberg would take on the role of CEO, effective August 2024. Fortune reported that Mintzberg, who previously held senior roles at Goldman Sachs, BlackRock, and Invesco, was brought in as Grayscale sought to "catch up with larger competitors" such as
BlackRock and
Fidelity following the launch of U.S. Bitcoin ETFs.
Genesis Global Capital Launched in 2013, Genesis was a cryptocurrency trading, lending, and asset custody platform, targeting institutional clients and high-net-worth individuals. They claim to have been the first Bitcoin cryptocurrency desk. Genesis acquired the London-based cryptocurrency custodial company Volt in early 2020. At the time, news media speculated that Grayscale Investments, another subsidiary of DCG, might transfer its cryptocurrency assets to Genesis from Coinbase, which had taken on Grayscale's custody needs through its acquisition of the company Xapo in 2019. Genesis' sister company, Grayscale Investments, had been holding its cryptocurrency assets with the company Xapo, which had been acquired by Genesis' rival Bitcoin trading company
Coinbase in 2019. News media speculated that Genesis' cryptocurrency custody would be transferred away from Coinbase and made internal to Greyscale after completion of the Volt acquisition. In late June and early July 2022, Genesis publicly disclosed that it was exposed to hundreds of millions of dollars in losses from loans to both the Hong Kong-based cryptocurrency lender Babel Finance and the bankrupt cryptocurrency hedge fund
Three Arrows Capital (3AC), and that its parent company DCG had taken on some of Genesis' debts in order to keep the company afloat. On November 16, Genesis abruptly halted all Bitcoin withdrawals and loan applications for their customers, The next morning,
Wall Street Journal reported that it had obtained confidential documents stating that Genesis had an "ongoing run on deposits". On January 19, 2023, Genesis Global Capital filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. with the unit continuing to undergo proceedings through 2023.
CoinDesk CoinDesk is a global media, research, and events platform that was acquired by DCG in 2016. It reports on bitcoin blockchain daily news, provides a bitcoin price index and publishes a quarterly
State of Bitcoin report. CoinDesk also hosts a conference on digital currencies and blockchain technologies named
Consensus. CoinDesk retained investment bank Lazard in January 2023 to explore options for a potential or full sale of the media company, which led to its sale in November 2023 from DCG to crypto exchange Bullish in an all-cash deal.
Foundry Foundry, established in 2019, sets up and manages
bitcoin mining operations in the United States and Canada. In addition to setting up and operating its own cryptocurrency mining equipment, Foundry also provides financing, specialized digital mining equipment, and expertise to other digital currency startups. In the summer of 2021, Foundry helped to relocate over $300 million worth of equipment from
China to North America following the Chinese government shutdown of many cryptocurrency mining operations.
Bloomberg reported in April 2023 that Foundry would stop offering free Bitcoin mining services, and between April 19 and April 22, would instead levy a pool fee on members. The services had been free since 2019. In July 2024, it was reported that Foundry along with crypto mining pool Antpool controlled almost 60% of the Bitcoin mining pool market.
Luno Cryptocurrency startup Luno (formally BitX) was founded in 2013 by four South Africans, Marcus Swanepoel, a former investment banker and Timothy Stranex, a Google software engineer, Carel van Wyk and Pieter Heyns. In 2015 BitX received a 3 million dollar investment injection by the
Naspers Group. In September 2020, DCG acquired Luno, a cryptocurrency exchange based in
London. At the time of the acquisition, Luno had more than 5 million customers. In October 2025, Yuma launched Yuma Asset Management anchored by a $10 million seed investment from DCG, offering institutional and accredited investors structured exposure to subnet tokens within the Bittensor ecosystem.
Fortitude Mining In January 2025, DCG spun off Fortitude Mining, the self-mining unit of Foundry, into a new wholly-owned subsidiary focused on self-mining Bitcoin and other digital assets with high long-term growth potential. == See also ==