Cryptio Series B Raises $45M For Digital Asset ERP

Cryptio Series B Raises $45M For Digital Asset ERP

Cryptio raised $45 million in a Series B funding round to expand financial infrastructure for digital asset operations. The raise signals continued institutional demand for accounting and reconciliation tools as banks increase activity in stablecoins and tokenized securities.

The round was co-led by BlackFin Capital Partners and Sentinel Global. Existing investors including 1kx, Alven, BlueYard Capital, and Ledger Cathay Capital also joined the financing.

Cryptio plans to deploy the capital toward new loan management and treasury management applications designed for regulated institutions entering digital asset markets.

Why Are Banks Investing In Digital Asset Accounting Tools?

Cryptio’s platform aggregates transaction data across blockchains, exchanges, custodians, and brokerages. The software converts that fragmented information into audit-ready financial records compatible with enterprise accounting systems.

The system supports audit procedures conducted by major firms including Deloitte, EY, KPMG, and PwC. Clients include institutions such as Circle, Gemini, Securitize, and SG Forge.

The company says its infrastructure has processed more than $3 trillion in cumulative transaction volume. Activity spans stablecoins, tokenized assets, lending markets, and exchange operations.

Institutional infrastructure remains one of the fastest-growing areas of digital assets. According to industry estimates, the tokenized real-world asset sector alone has surpassed tens of billions of dollars in value, pushing banks to upgrade operational systems.

“This funding enables us to broaden our expansion and serve these regulated institutions with new applications,” said Antoine Scalia.

He added that loan management and treasury tools will support institutions managing large digital asset balances.

Cryptio currently serves more than 400 enterprise customers across over 30 countries. Its clients range from crypto-native firms to traditional banks building digital asset desks.

The next catalyst may emerge as new regulatory frameworks for digital asset accounting and reporting take shape, potentially increasing demand for institutional-grade reconciliation infrastructure.

Read more