DFNS raises $16 million in Series A
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Launched in 2020, the start-up based between Paris and New York has succeeded in carving out a place for itself in the midst of digital asset custody giants such as Fireblocks and Ledger. With this deal, it aims to accelerate its development, particularly with major financial institutions.

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In the world of digital asset preservation, there are a few giants such as Ledger and Fireblocks, but DFNS is gradually making its mark.

Boosted by good momentum in 2024, especially towards the end of the year as markets rose, the start-up based between Paris and New York has just raised $16 million (€15.5 million) in a Series A.

This deal was led by Further Ventures, which is a private equity fund based in Abu Dhabi. Other historical investors, such as White Star Capital, Hashed, Semantic, Techstars and Bpifrance also participated in the round.

The valuation of DFNS, which had already raised €13 million ($12 million) in 2022, is not public.

"This deal validates both our product and our focus on fintechs and financial players," explains Clarisse Hagège, co-founder and CEO of DFNS, which claims more than 130 customers including Fidelity, Zodia Custody (Standard Chartered's crypto subsidiary) and Stripe, which has just acquired Bridge.

Launched in 2020, DFNS has developed a wallet creation solution based on MPC (Multi-Party Computation) technology. This MPC technology breaks down the access keys to the digital wallet into fragments; these are then distributed across different secure universes.

Today, the leader in this MPC market is the American Fireblocks, which has raised more than a billion dollars from all its fundraising. By contrast, France's Ledger is the world leader in the self-custody segment, meaning that customers themselves are the sole managers of Ledger's technology.

The strengths of DFNS?

DFNS has managed to carve out a niche between the major players in the sector thanks to two things.

Firstly, modularity. Thanks to the API system, the 25-strong start-up allows developers to take bricks and create, in partnership with DFNS, their own wallet system according to their needs.

"We allow our customers to deploy their own instances on public clouds like AWS, private clouds, and connect their Thales or IBM HSMs to our blockchain transaction management system," explains Clarisse Hagège (read our report on the future of wallets).

Then there's the price. While not all offers are the same, DFNS has managed to come out on top, thanks in particular to a billing system based on usage and not on volumes under management. "DFNS is clearly one of the cheapest players on the market", confirms one company, which is not even a client of theirs.

With this fundraising, DFNS wants to recruit a few more tech profiles and accelerate its development with financial institutions in a context where the arrival of players like BlackRock has put a serious boost on adoption.

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Raphaël Bloch

Raphaël Bloch is CEO and co-founder of The Big Whale, an independent market intelligence platform on digital assets serving financial market participants through editorial coverage, research, a weekly briefing, and in-person events. He co-founded The Big Whale in April 2022. At the platform, he moderates and hosts institutional events bringing together banks, asset managers, custodians, and infrastructure providers on topics including staking, on-chain yield, stablecoins, DeFi lending, and tokenisation. He has moderated panels at events hosted in partnership with Bitwise, Everstake, Gemini, Morpho, Hexarq, Coinhouse, Delubac, Franklin Templeton, and the Ethereum Foundation, held in London and Paris between late 2025 and mid-2026.

Before founding The Big Whale, Bloch worked as a reporter at Les Echos from December 2016 to March 2020, then at L'Express from March 2020 to March 2022. He also previously worked at Reuters. Since September 2022, he has held a concurrent role as Business Analyst at BFM Business. He has been active in crypto journalism since 2016. He holds degrees from emlyon and the CFJ.

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