Spanish traditional banks rush into crypto exchanges: Bankinter joins the financing boom

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The Spanish banking industry is opening its doors to embrace digital assets. Earlier this month, Spanish banking giant Bankinter announced its investment in Spain’s cryptocurrency exchange Bit2Me. This is not an isolated event but a reflection of the changing attitude of traditional financial institutions towards the crypto market.

Bankinter Becomes a New Investor in Bit2Me

Bankinter acquired a minority stake in Bit2Me and participated in the platform’s August funding round of €30 million (approximately $33 million). The funding was led by crypto giant Tether and attracted the attention of major Spanish financial institutions.

It is reported that this investment not only strengthened Bit2Me’s capital structure but also provided strong support for its regulatory ambitions in Europe and Latin America. Headquartered in Madrid, Bit2Me is one of the first companies officially registered under the EU’s new Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA), giving it a legal foundation to operate across the entire European Union.

MiCA Regulation Drives Traditional Finance into the Crypto Space

The emergence of MiCA has changed the game. As the world’s first comprehensive crypto asset regulatory framework, it provides a compliant pathway for traditional financial institutions to enter this field. Due to its strict regulatory compliance, Bit2Me is gradually being positioned as a crypto service provider platform for banks.

Bankinter emphasized in a statement that this deal aims to promote “technological and knowledge synergy,” especially in the field of Distributed Ledger Technology (DLT). This indicates that traditional banks have recognized that crypto technology is no longer a fringe phenomenon but an essential part of financial innovation.

From Competition to Cooperation: A New Era of Banks and Exchanges

Bit2Me is building a financial network in Spain. Besides Bankinter, other major players in the Spanish banking sector investing in the platform include BBVA, Unicaja, and Cecabank. This is not coincidence but a planned integration of the financial system.

More notably, Bit2Me’s business has penetrated the core operations of traditional banks. The platform provides backend crypto services to Turkey’s Garanti BBVA and has jointly launched an asset custody and trading platform with Cecabank. These collaborations indicate that mainstream financial institutions are beginning to see crypto infrastructure as a necessary investment in their digital transformation.

Bit2Me’s CFO Pabloás Casadío commented on this cooperation: “This alliance confirms that the banking industry can leverage our deep industry expertise to improve services. Instead of competing, we should collaborate.”

Signals of a Financial System Transformation

In July last year, Spanish bank Unicaja, through its investment arm Unicaja Ventures, purchased over 5% of Bit2Me shares and secured a seat on the board. Now, the addition of Bankinter further confirms a trend: traditional banks in Spain and across Europe are taking crypto assets seriously, rather than simply viewing them as speculative tools.

This wave of cooperation reflects a broader industry shift. As the MiCA regulatory framework gradually matures, exchanges are moving from wild growth to regulation, and traditional banks are reassessing their roles in the digital asset era. The investments of Bankinter and other Spanish banks in Bit2Me may just be the beginning of this transformation.

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