Kraken on June 30, 2026 made its full-service institutional prime brokerage platform, Kraken Prime, accessible through Trever, a digital asset operating system used by European banks and brokers. The integration is live now for eligible clients of both platforms.
Key Takeaways
- Kraken Prime, the exchange’s full-service institutional prime brokerage, is now accessible through Trever’s digital asset operating system for European banks and brokers.
- The platform routes orders across more than 20 global liquidity venues, which Kraken says cover over 90% of digital asset liquidity, with smart order routing and algorithmic execution.
- Trades settle into qualified custody and post into institutions’ existing systems, supported by a 24/7 institutional account management team.
- Trever frames the setup as MiCA-conform, letting banks run digital asset operations without assembling custody and execution infrastructure piece by piece.
What Happened?
Kraken Prime, the company’s full-service prime brokerage platform, is now accessible through Trever, a digital asset operating system used by European banks and brokers. The integration lets institutions execute trades, settle into qualified custody, and record transactions inside their existing operational workflows.
The platform provides institutional crypto trading across more than 20 global liquidity venues, which Kraken says cover over 90% of digital asset liquidity, with smart order routing and algorithmic execution for block trades. Trading, custody, and additional services sit within a single interface, backed by a 24/7 institutional account management team.
Gurpreet Oberoi, Head of Kraken Institutional at the institutional crypto trading arm, framed the target market in the announcement:
Prime Brokerage Moves Into the Bank Back Office
The structural shift here is distribution. Rather than asking a bank or broker to open and operate a separate trading venue, Kraken Prime is delivered through software the institution already runs. Execution, custody, and booking arrive as one workflow rather than three vendor relationships stitched together.
European banks and brokers using Trever can now access Kraken Prime — execution, qualified custody and settlement, all in one place.
— Kraken Institutional (@KrakenInsto) June 30, 2026
No new infrastructure. Just a direct connection into 90%+ of digital asset liquidity.https://t.co/V1EgDCYlsh
That packaging targets the real friction in institutional crypto: not access to liquidity, but the operational drag of reconciling execution on one platform, custody on another, and internal accounting on a third. Folding all three into a single auditable record removes a reconciliation burden that compliance and treasury teams have long cited as a reason to stay on the sidelines.
Many European institutions still run fragmented digital asset setups across separate providers for trading, safekeeping, and books-and-records. Consolidating those functions into one interface lets a desk move from order to settled, custodied position without exporting data between systems, the kind of operational continuity that traditional asset classes already take for granted.
Why MiCA Frames the Pitch?
The timing leans on the EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets regime, the bloc-wide crypto regulation framework that sets common authorization, custody, and governance standards for crypto-asset service providers. For a regulated bank, an integration described as MiCA-conform matters less for marketing than for sign-off: it gives risk and compliance functions a recognizable standard to map controls against.
That phrasing captures the strategy. The selling point is not novel yield or exotic instruments; it is institutional-grade system that fits inside existing governance. Reaching banks through Trever’s operating system also lets Kraken extend its institutional footprint and market share without onboarding each counterparty directly, using a partner already embedded in European back offices as the distribution layer.
CoinLaw’s Takeaway
The Kraken-Trever integration is less a product launch than an infrastructure bet: that European institutional adoption hinges on operational fit, not headline liquidity. By delivering execution and qualified custody inside software banks already use, Kraken is competing on workflow integration rather than on venue features, a quieter axis, but the one treasury and compliance teams actually weigh.
What the announcement does not yet settle is depth of uptake. “Live for eligible clients” confirms the rails exist; it does not reveal how many of Trever’s bank and broker clients route meaningful volume through them, or how the qualified-custody arrangement is structured underneath.