Nasdaq and Talos have partnered to integrate digital asset trading infrastructure directly into Nasdaq’s Calypso capital markets platform and Trade Surveillance system, giving institutional clients a native path to manage tokenized collateral and monitor crypto trading activity alongside traditional assets.
The partnership, announced on March 23, 2026, connects Talos’s institutional-grade digital asset order management and exchange connectivity with two of Nasdaq’s core institutional products. The goal is to deliver a unified solution for managing tokenized collateral across both mainstream and digital markets, according to the official announcement.
500+
Financial institutions on Nasdaq’s Calypso platform
Nasdaq’s partnership with Talos connects this global institutional network to native digital asset infrastructure, covering trading, post-trade, and surveillance workflows. Source: Nasdaq
What the Nasdaq-Talos Integration Covers
Calypso is Nasdaq’s multi-asset, front-to-back capital markets platform used by banks, asset managers, and central banks for risk management, margin calculations, and collateral optimization across traditional asset classes. Talos operates as an infrastructure layer, not a broker, providing institutional connectivity to exchanges, OTC desks, and prime brokers in the digital asset space.
The integration embeds Talos’s digital asset order management and venue connectivity directly into Calypso workflows. Institutional users who already run their equities, fixed income, and derivatives operations through Calypso can now access digital asset trading and post-trade functions without building or maintaining separate crypto infrastructure.
On the surveillance side, Nasdaq’s Trade Surveillance platform monitors trading activity for market abuse patterns including layering, spoofing, wash trading, and cross-market manipulation. The Talos integration means crypto trading activity by institutions will now fall under the same compliance monitoring umbrella as their traditional asset activity.
Roland Chai, Executive Vice President at Nasdaq, framed the deal around a specific institutional pain point: “This partnership solves a fundamental challenge facing institutional markets: the inability to manage exposure across markets with a single risk and asset lens.”
Why Banks Using Calypso Now Have a Direct Crypto On-Ramp
The practical significance here is scale. Calypso is deployed at hundreds of global financial institutions that, until now, had no native digital asset workflow inside their existing systems. Any institution wanting to custody, trade, or offer crypto products to clients had to run fragmented, siloed infrastructure outside their primary capital markets platform.
Nasdaq’s own research quantifies the inefficiency this creates. Roughly 25% of collateral across institutional markets is currently tied up in corrective or non-interest-bearing measures. The firm identified over $35 billion in excess or non-remunerated collateral, a figure that tokenization could meaningfully reduce by enabling real-time collateral mobility across asset types.
40+
Digital asset venues accessible through Talos infrastructure
Talos provides institutional-grade connectivity to exchanges, OTC desks, and prime brokers, now bridged into Nasdaq’s Calypso and Trade Surveillance ecosystem. Source: Talos
The compliance dimension may matter more than the trading rails. For many institutions, the blocker to crypto adoption is not technology but surveillance. Compliance teams need to monitor digital asset activity with the same rigor applied to equities and FX. This integration removes that barrier by giving compliance officers a unified view of on-chain and off-chain positions, flagging the same manipulation patterns across both.
Talos already serves institutional clients including Galaxy and BCB Group, giving the integration immediate credibility with the buy-side firms most likely to adopt it. Anton Katz, CEO and Co-Founder of Talos, characterized the move as inevitable: “The evolution toward tokenized collateral is a natural progression for institutional capital markets.”
The deal arrives during a period of sustained institutional interest in digital asset products, even as broader crypto sentiment remains deeply negative. The Fear & Greed Index sat at 8 on the day of the announcement, firmly in “Extreme Fear” territory, underscoring the disconnect between retail sentiment and institutional infrastructure buildout.
Where This Fits in the Broadening TradFi-Crypto Infrastructure Stack
The Nasdaq-Talos deal follows a clear pattern: traditional financial infrastructure providers are partnering with crypto-native firms rather than building digital asset capabilities from scratch. Bloomberg integrated crypto data feeds into its terminal. CME expanded its crypto derivatives suite. DTCC has run digital asset settlement pilots. Each move embeds crypto rails into systems institutions already use daily.
Nasdaq itself has been building toward this for several years, establishing a dedicated digital assets business unit and pursuing custody capabilities. This partnership is not a standalone experiment but part of a broader strategy to make Nasdaq’s platform stack natively crypto-capable, a trend that mirrors what is happening across the institutional crypto landscape this quarter.
Talos occupies a specific niche in this stack: the infrastructure layer that connects institutional order flow to digital asset liquidity venues. Competitors in this space include Fireblocks and Copper, but Talos’s focus on order management and execution, rather than custody or settlement alone, makes it a natural fit for a platform like Calypso that already handles multi-asset trade lifecycle management.
The convergence pattern is worth watching. As traditional venues embed crypto-native infrastructure, the operational gap between “crypto trading” and “trading” narrows for institutions. Firms that were previously confined to crypto-native platforms can now access digital asset markets through the same systems they use for everything else.
What remains unclear is timeline. Neither Nasdaq nor Talos disclosed a specific go-live date for the integrated product, and commercial terms of the partnership were not made public. Whether other Nasdaq platform integrations, such as AxiomSL for regulatory reporting, follow the same pattern will signal how deep this commitment runs.
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.
