Franklin Templeton Completes 250 Digital Acquisition, Launches Franklin Crypto

Franklin Templeton completed its acquisition of 250 Digital on June 22, 2026, formally establishing Franklin Crypto as the firm’s dedicated active digital asset management division aimed at pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, and other institutional allocators.

Franklin Templeton Completes 250 Digital Acquisition, Launches Franklin Crypto

The closing brings the 250 Digital investment team and all liquid cryptocurrency strategies previously managed by CoinFund under one roof at Franklin Templeton, a firm that reported $1.78 trillion in assets under management as of May 31, 2026.

Franklin Templeton Total AUM
$1.78 trillion
Reported by Franklin Templeton in the June 22, 2026 acquisition-completion announcement.

Franklin Crypto will offer institutional investors actively managed cryptocurrency strategies, positioning Franklin Templeton as one of the largest traditional asset managers with a dedicated crypto arm.

What Franklin Templeton acquired from 250 Digital and CoinFund

The transaction transferred two core assets: the 250 Digital investment team and all liquid cryptocurrency strategies that had previously operated under CoinFund. Together, these form the operational foundation of Franklin Crypto.

Franklin Crypto will function as an active digital asset management division rather than a passive index or custody-only offering. The unit is designed to run managed strategies for institutional clients who want exposure to liquid crypto markets through a regulated, traditional-finance wrapper.

Leadership structure

Christopher Perkins, Seth Ginns, and Tony Pecore lead Franklin Crypto under Sandy Kaul. Perkins, who described the institutional moment for crypto as having “arrived,” brings the CoinFund-era investment approach to the new division.

“Crypto’s institutional moment has arrived.”

— Christopher Perkins, Franklin Templeton announcement

Liquid cryptocurrency strategies from CoinFund

The liquid strategies acquired were originally built and managed by CoinFund before being spun out into 250 Digital. These are actively managed positions in liquid crypto tokens, distinct from venture-style locked-up investments in early-stage protocols.

Franklin Templeton CEO Jenny Johnson called the deal “an exciting addition” for the firm, signaling that the acquisition fits a broader strategic build-out rather than an opportunistic one-off.

Why Franklin Crypto targets pension and sovereign fund demand

Franklin Crypto is not a retail product. Banking Dive reported that the division is specifically aimed at pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, and other large institutional allocators, a client segment that has historically lacked access to actively managed crypto strategies from brand-name asset managers.

Pension and sovereign funds typically require regulated counterparties, institutional custody solutions, and compliance frameworks that most crypto-native firms cannot provide. Franklin Templeton’s scale and regulatory infrastructure give Franklin Crypto a distribution advantage that pure-play crypto funds lack, similar to how firms like Upexi have sought to bridge traditional finance and crypto treasury strategies.

Franklin Templeton’s digital-assets business managed approximately $1.8 billion in global assets as of December 31, 2025, providing a pre-existing base for the new division.

Digital Assets AUM Before Close
$1.8 billion
Reported by Franklin Templeton in its April 1, 2026 pre-close announcement launching Franklin Crypto.

The firm’s digital-assets team has been active since 2018 and now spans more than 50 people. The 250 Digital acquisition adds portfolio management capacity to an infrastructure that already included tokenization work and on-chain settlement tools.

The April 1 pre-close announcement noted that part of the transaction consideration would use BENJI tokens tied to Franklin Templeton’s Franklin OnChain U.S. Government Money Fund, highlighting the firm’s commitment to using its own tokenized infrastructure in deal execution. This approach echoes the broader institutional trend toward stablecoin and tokenized asset integration across traditional financial rails.

The institutional crypto expansion comes as the broader market trades cautiously. Bitcoin was priced near $64,589 at press time, with the Crypto Fear & Greed Index sitting at 20, a reading classified as “Extreme Fear.” Franklin Templeton’s decision to close the deal and launch Franklin Crypto during subdued sentiment suggests the firm is building for long-term institutional demand rather than timing market cycles, a dynamic also visible in how institutional holders like Bitmine have continued accumulating digital assets regardless of short-term price action.

What Franklin Templeton still has not disclosed

The deal value remains undisclosed in all sourced material. Neither the June 22 completion release nor the April 1 announcement specified the total transaction price.

The June 22 completion announcement confirmed the deal closed and Franklin Crypto was formally established, but it did not detail specific pension or sovereign fund mandates, product launch timelines, or initial client commitments. The pension and sovereign fund targeting is more explicitly described in third-party coverage than in Franklin Templeton’s own releases.

Product rollout details, mandate sizing, fee structures, and client uptake remain the next data points to watch. Whether Franklin Crypto begins with separately managed accounts, commingled fund vehicles, or both has not been specified publicly.

FAQ

What is Franklin Crypto?

Franklin Crypto is Franklin Templeton’s dedicated active digital asset management division, formally established on June 22, 2026 upon the closing of the 250 Digital acquisition. It offers institutional investors actively managed cryptocurrency strategies.

What did Franklin Templeton acquire from 250 Digital and CoinFund?

Franklin Templeton acquired the 250 Digital investment team and all liquid cryptocurrency strategies previously run by CoinFund. The leadership team includes Christopher Perkins, Seth Ginns, and Tony Pecore, operating under Sandy Kaul.

Why are pension and sovereign funds relevant to this deal?

Franklin Crypto is positioned to serve pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, and other institutional allocators that require regulated counterparties and institutional-grade compliance frameworks. Franklin Templeton’s existing infrastructure and $1.78 trillion AUM base provide the credibility and scale these allocators typically demand before committing capital to digital asset strategies.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.

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