Joining us today is Elliot Andrews, CEO of Aspen Digital. Elliot, thank you so much for joining us at ADX today.
Thanks for having me.
For those who haven't come across Aspen Digital before, can you tell us what you've built and the gap in the market you're trying to fill?
We've been around since 2022 and we're a digital asset wealth management platform supporting family offices and ultra-high-net-worth clients. Back in 2022, crypto was a pretty hard asset class to access — you needed wallets, exchanges, staking platforms, fund managers. We brought all of that together to build essentially a private banking-style experience for the asset class. Fast forward to today, we're regulated under ADGM and we're broadening our offering into more alternative assets.
Why was Abu Dhabi the right home for the business, and what does that regulatory stamp mean for your clients?
Regulatory certainty became extremely important to us. We looked at a number of jurisdictions, and there were a couple of reasons we chose this one. Commercially, there's a significant concentration of family offices and wealth here that is actively looking at this asset class. And from a regulatory perspective, ADGM has been regulating in this space since 2018 — they have one of the most developed infrastructures around digital assets. We offer a wide range of services, and they were one of the few regulators that would allow us to license for all the different activities we wanted to do.
Who are these clients in practice — are they individuals, families, institutions?
It's evolved over time. Initially we were supporting individuals within large families — second and third generation family members who were keen on new technology and were early into crypto in 2021 and 2022. Fast forward to today and there's a more institutional allocation process happening at the family level. In Asia that's increasingly the norm. Here in the Middle East, it's still more the second-generation individuals leading the charge. We're also now having more conversations with traditional allocators — multifamily offices, wealth management firms, private banks — about how we can support their crypto product needs.
Where is appetite strongest right now for sophisticated investors, at this point in what has been a challenging cycle?
It's been a tough year given the relative performance of the asset class. Most tokens have seen significant drawdowns, which makes it difficult for traditional capital to allocate. The one thing people maintain a long-term view on is Bitcoin. It's sitting in many, many portfolios and adoption is just increasing — everyone sees the value in having some of it. So we spend a lot of time with clients thinking about how they acquire Bitcoin and what they do with it subsequently. Bitcoin yield — using managers or strategies to generate more Bitcoin on your holdings — is something everyone is interested in. Beyond that, dollar-denominated yield generation is very active right now, whether through DeFi or real world assets. While we're in this part of the cycle, people want to put idle cash to work.
Operating across both Asia and the Middle East — how does client education and onboarding differ between those two markets?
A lot of our client base is Asian, and they were early adopters. The big exchanges largely came from that part of the world, so traditional capital there has already been through one or two cycles and is more experienced. Here in the Middle East, having been on the ground for the better part of three years, I think we're probably one cycle behind in the private wealth space. There's a lot of curiosity, but most people haven't allocated yet. That's why education is so important for us here. We've deliberately avoided big events — we focus on roundtables, bringing in industry voices, and spending real time getting people comfortable with the nuances of the asset class. The majority of people we speak to here are curious and not yet ready, but when they are, we want to be the destination they choose.
Crypto and traditional finance used to be separate worlds — Aspen deliberately sits at the intersection of both. What's the strategy there?
Crypto has always been at our core — our whole infrastructure is built on stablecoins and the ability to allocate across crypto hedge funds, venture capital, token purchases, and yield strategies. But today, crypto platforms globally are becoming multi-asset, and traditional platforms are starting to offer crypto. The big driver behind that convergence has been real world assets coming on-chain. Given we hold a custody license, we can hold stablecoins and allocate freely across asset classes. We've already launched US treasuries for idle cash, and we have a lot of plans to broaden the product set as more assets come on-chain. We're not a bank, but with wallet infrastructure and stablecoin capability, the flexibility is there.
Final thoughts — where does Aspen Digital go from here, and tell us about the pre-IPO opportunities you're now offering clients.
We go where the demand is. When we started, a big point of differentiation was offering private market opportunities in blockchain companies — giving people early access. We did that very successfully in 2022. Fast forward to today and you're seeing similar appetite in other asset classes — AI, defence, financial services, and blockchain again. Our clients are a traditional client base, and they're demanding access to pre-IPO companies that are doing very well and whose tools they're already using every day. We're fortunate that we can provide that. Our CIO is based in the US and brings opportunities from there, and we have strong connections in Asia sourcing deals as well.
Fantastic — deep roots in crypto, now a growing alternatives platform. Elliot, thank you so much for joining us at ADX today.