Staking: Kiln raises €17 million
Ask AI TO SUMMARIZE ThIS ARTICLE

The French start-up, which offers a staking solution for businesses, wants to continue to expand. Particularly in the United States.

Your 2 free articles this month are up

The research your peers are already leveraging

The Big Whale gives financial institutions the market intelligence, network, and platform to move with confidence in digital assets. Trusted by 150+ firms.

Laszlo Szabo is not one to get carried away. Not his style. But at the end of November, when the markets are not far from capitulation because of the fall of FTX, the co-founder of Kiln can't help but put on a broad smile. Less than six months after an initial fundraising round of €4.7 million, the French start-up has just raised a further €17 million in a Series A.

In addition to the initial investors (Alven, Blue Yard Capital, etc), other industry heavyweights such as US exchange platform Kraken have entered the capital of the young start-up created in 2020.

In addition to the initial investors (Alven, Blue Yard Capital, etc), other heavyweights in the sector such as the American exchange platform Kraken have entered the capital of the young start-up created in 2020.

Kiln, whose valuation is not public, specialises in the "staking" of cryptocurrencies in Proof-of-Stake (PoS). The largest is Ethereum, which switched to PoS in September with The Merge.

Staking is a remunerated activity that involves "immobilising" crypto-assets in a smart contract to help secure the protocol. The more ethers you stake, the more you are paid in ethers.

In two years, Kiln has become a major player in this industry by enabling companies to stake as well. For the moment, you need to "stake" at least the equivalent of 32 ethers (€35,000) to be a Kiln customer, but the company is working on a product that will enable its professional customers like Ledger, and other wallets, exchanges, and custodians to offer live staking on any amount brings.

The Paris-based start-up, which employs nearly 40 people in 5 countries (France, Holland, the UK, Spain and Italy), although the majority are in Paris, currently manages just over $600 million in cryptos. And the figures are growing all the time.

Lending on the wane

Kiln is benefiting in particular from the setbacks of a large number of lending players. After the collapse of Terra (Luna) in the spring, several players like Celsius went bankrupt, and the collapse of FTX has accelerated the phenomenon even further. "Lending is simpler to set up, but we can also see that it is much less secure than lending," explains Laszlo Szabo, co-founder and CEO of Kiln.

In staking, the counterparty is Ethereum whereas for lending, it is the platforms themselves with the consequences we know 😅.

With its fundraising, Kiln aims to expand in Europe and the United States, where some of the world's biggest asset managers are increasingly interested in cryptos. American giant Fidelity has launched a product enabling its tens of millions of individual customers to be able to put cryptos into their retirement savings plans. "Things are moving fast in the US," confirms Laszlo Szabo.

Kiln is not the only company to offer staking to businesses either. Several other players, such as the Canadian Figment, have managed to grow strongly. Figment is valued at over a billion dollars.

Format
News
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.

See all articles ↗
Subscribe to The Drop
The leading weekly briefing on digital assets for financial institutions: independent analysis, reports, benchmarks and exclusive events, delivered to your inbox.
Read by 30,000 professionals
November 12–13, 2026

The Geneva Summit

The Corporate Gateway: where the future of onchain finance is decided. 300 handpicked decision-makers. One shared mandate.
300
Decision-makers
2 days
Intensive program