The conversation around institutional crypto adoption has shifted from whether it will happen to what could stop it. For Bybit, one of the largest derivatives exchanges by volume, the bottleneck is no longer technology or liquidity. It comes down to trust. In the official statement , Chief Commercial Officer Yoyee Wang made the case that trust will define the next era for institutions entering digital assets. The timing matters. Walls of capital have stayed on the sidelines while heavyweights like BlackRock, Fidelity, and Franklin Templeton run live experiments with tokenized funds and spot ETFs. The missing piece has been a custody and exchange environment that meets fund-level compliance, audit, and segregation standards.
Exchange failures in previous cycles still echo through risk committees. FTX and the cascade of centralized platform collapses rewired the checklist institutions use before wiring a single dollar. Wang’s framing puts Bybit directly into this discussion, arguing that the platform’s proof-of-reserves architecture, regulatory licensing, and client asset segregation can meet that higher bar. Whether the market agrees remains an open question, but the demand for a tier-one venue that combines derivatives depth with institutional-grade infrastructure is real.
What Institutions Are Now Demanding
Trust is not a vague corporate value in today’s crypto market structure. It translates into specific, hard requirements. Funds want legally isolated client accounts, not the omnibus pooling that led to commingling of assets in past blowups. They want real-time attestations and on-chain verification, not quarterly PDFs. They want a custodian that doesn’t double as a market-making book they trade against. Bybit’s push toward regulated entities in multiple jurisdictions and its transparency portal are part of an industry-wide pivot. Other exchanges like Coinbase have leaned into public company status to offer similar comfort. The race is now about who can turn compliance infrastructure into a commercial advantage.
For institutional traders, derivatives exposure is essential. Bitcoin and Ethereum spot products are only part of the allocation puzzle. Access to futures, options, and perpetual swaps with deep order books and clear margining rules is often the deciding factor for macro funds and systematic managers. That’s where Bybit’s market share gives it a lane, but only if the trust question is answered first.
Where Broader Market Trends Add Pressure
The institutional push is not happening in a vacuum. On-chain real-world asset markets have passed $20 billion, with tokenized Treasury products acting as a gateway for traditional capital. The broader market is accelerating the need for venues that can bridge DeFi liquidity with off-chain settlement rails. A recent round of tokenization milestones saw Bullish acquire Equiniti for $4.2 billion and Ondo and JPMorgan execute a live settlement, proving that the plumbing for institutional tokenized assets is no longer theoretical. Exchanges that want to attract serious flow will need to plug into that plumbing without creating points of friction or opacity.
The same pressure shows up in staking infrastructure. Recent institutional moves into Sui’s ecosystem, driven in part by a Nasdaq-listed firm’s staking product and a fintech partnership with Paga, highlight that institutional staking demand is no longer a niche. These are regulated entities that need custody and exchange partners equally capable of handling staking rewards, slashing risks, and reporting. Bybit’s statement on trust implicitly acknowledges that staking-as-a-service and yield products must meet the same institutional standards as spot and derivatives.
Regulatory Fog Remains the Wildcard
For all the infrastructure work, regulatory clarity remains uneven. Even as exchanges build proof-of-reserves systems, the legal ground beneath them shifts. In the U.S., landmark legislation aimed at creating a federal framework for digital assets has faced intense lobbying from banking groups just days before a Senate vote. The outcome of that fight will shape how exchanges with global ambitions, including Bybit, can operate across jurisdictions. The stalled momentum on Capitol Hill is a reminder that compliance infrastructure is only half the equation. The policy layer can still redraw the map.
Wang’s argument that trust is the gatekeeper for institutional capital is not new, but it lands differently when delivered by an exchange with a heavy derivatives skew. The market will likely watch whether Bybit can convert that message into verifiable audits, segregated bankruptcy-remote custody vehicles, and licensing in tier-one financial centers. The payoff is significant because the size of institutional capital that has not yet entered crypto is still an order of magnitude larger than what has arrived through ETFs and spot funds.
The next wave of adoption will not be driven by a better user interface or a higher leverage limit. It will come down to whether the lawyers and compliance officers who control institutional allocations are willing to sign off. That is a trust decision, and it is not yet won.