Asian Institutions Are Finally Warming to Crypto Hedge Funds

The Takeaway:

  • Asian institutional investors, mostly high-net-worth individuals and family offices, are increasingly showing interest in digital assets, with some having allocated part of their portfolios to crypto hedge funds.

  • The gloomy macroeconomic outlook and the news of Facebook’s Libra and China’s central bank digital currency have fueled this interest, market participants say.

  • Crypto hedge funds in the region face hurdles to getting off the ground, including licensing, banking, custody and insurance.


Asian institutional investors, mostly high-net-worth individuals and family offices unfamiliar with digital assets, are increasingly showing interest in allocating a small portion of their portfolios to crypto hedge funds.

Unlike in the past, some have actually taken the plunge and made such allocations, while more are likely to follow, industry experts say.

Related: Billionaire Investor Eyes $1 Billion Crypto Hedge Fund

The rub is that, like in other parts of the world, a crypto-averse banking sector and regulatory requirements pose high hurdles to launching such funds, and hence wider institutional adoption, in Asia.

This year has been a crucial turning point for BBShares, a Hong Kong-based crypto hedge fund catering to institutional investors in Asia. The firm is on track to reach committed capital of $10 million before year-end, mostly from high-net-worth individuals and family offices, while traditional financial institutions remain on the sidelines.

Most of the capital came in during the past four months after news of Facebook’s Libra project and bitcoin’s bull run since early this year piqued investors’ interest.

“The pace of [institutional] investor allocation to crypto this year has been much faster,” said Jett Li, chief investment officer at BBShares who formerly worked at Bank of New York Mellon. “Demand for secure and efficient institutional asset allocation into crypto is quite strong.”

Related: UK Regulators Approve First Cryptocurrency Hedge Fund

Tiantian Kullander, co-founder of Asian crypto trading firm Amber Group, echoed that sentiment.

“The interests are definitely there,” he said. “The frequency [of institutional investors inquiring about crypto investments] is increasing noticeably in recent months.”

That said, the number of crypto hedge funds located in Asia is still small. Around five percent of global crypto hedge funds are located in Singapore, compared to 64 percent in the United States, according to a 2019 research report by consulting firm PwC.

These funds are structured much like traditional hedge funds, leveraging strategies such as quantitative trading, arbitrage, long-only and long-short, and aiming to generate alpha, or above-market returns, for institutional investors.