Key Highlights
- A new collaboration between Lombard and Bitwise enables institutional holders to generate yields and access loans against their Bitcoin holdings without custody transfers
- The solution leverages “Bitcoin Smart Accounts” technology to bridge institutional custody systems with blockchain-based financial services
- Morpho, a decentralized lending platform, powers the borrowing functionality
- An estimated $500 billion in institutionally-held Bitcoin remains largely inactive in decentralized finance ecosystems
- Launch timeline is set for the second quarter of 2026, with plans to expand custodian partnerships thereafter
Lombard, which specializes in Bitcoin lending infrastructure, has revealed a strategic alliance with Bitwise Asset Management designed to enable institutional investors to activate their Bitcoin holdings while maintaining existing custody arrangements.
.@Bitwise Asset Management joins Lombard’s Bitcoin Smart Accounts as a strategic yield partner.
The global crypto asset manager with $15B+ AUM and 40+ investment products is developing scalable Bitcoin yield strategies for the estimated $500B in institutionally custodied BTC. pic.twitter.com/6HUAJP9YIZ
— Lombard (@Lombard_Finance) March 24, 2026
The announcement came during the Digital Asset Summit in New York. The initiative focuses on serving asset management firms, corporate treasury departments, and high-net-worth clients who control substantial Bitcoin positions but have faced limited opportunities for yield generation.
According to Jacob Phillips, Lombard’s Chief Executive Officer, the breakthrough centers on what they’re calling “Bitcoin Smart Accounts.” This technology bridges the gap between institutional custody frameworks and blockchain finance—two ecosystems that have remained largely disconnected.
Bitwise will develop the return-generating strategies. These approaches will merge decentralized finance lending protocols with tokenized traditional assets. The borrowing framework will be powered by Morpho, a decentralized lending platform that facilitates loans collateralized by Bitcoin.
The system employs Bitcoin-native mechanisms, including partially signed transactions and timelock features, to authenticate collateral. This methodology enables onchain position representation without requiring actual transfer of the underlying Bitcoin assets.
Phillips emphasized that the architecture eliminates three critical vulnerabilities simultaneously: custody exposure, bridge vulnerabilities, and counterparty dependencies. These factors have traditionally complicated or deterred institutional participation in Bitcoin lending markets.
Lombard’s research indicates approximately $500 billion in Bitcoin value currently resides in institutional custody arrangements. The overwhelming majority remains disconnected from onchain financial ecosystems, producing zero yields.
Bitcoin’s DeFi Footprint Remains Modest Despite Recent Expansion
Bitcoin’s participation in decentralized finance currently represents approximately $2.93 billion in total value locked, based on DefiLlama metrics. While this constitutes a modest fraction of Bitcoin’s roughly $1.4 trillion market capitalization, the figure has shown consistent growth.
Babylon Protocol dominates Bitcoin-focused DeFi platforms with approximately $2.8 billion in total value locked. Lombard holds the second position with around $744 million.
Additional market developments include Telegram’s integration of yield-producing vaults into its cryptocurrency wallet during February, supporting Bitcoin, Ether, and USDT. March saw Babylon Protocol partner with hardware wallet manufacturer Ledger, enabling users to generate yields while preserving self-custody through hardware-authenticated transaction signing.
Previously, in January, Bitwise had collaborated with Morpho to introduce non-custodial vault products for yield generation via overcollateralized lending mechanisms.
Implications for Institutional Market Participants
Institutional investors have faced constrained choices. Generating returns or obtaining liquidity from Bitcoin positions traditionally required exiting custody arrangements, accepting counterparty exposure, or creating taxable transactions.
The Lombard-Bitwise framework aims to circumvent these challenges entirely. By preserving Bitcoin within existing custody infrastructure, institutions avoid modifying their asset holding protocols.
Phillips characterized the innovation as transforming Bitcoin from a static value reserve into productive investment capital. The platform launch is scheduled for the second quarter of 2026, with Lombard confirming plans to onboard additional custodians and protocols following the initial deployment.
