IBM has launched Digital Asset Haven, a comprehensive platform enabling financial institutions, governments, and enterprises to manage digital assets across multiple blockchains with enterprise-grade security and compliance controls.
The platform, developed in partnership with digital asset infrastructure provider Dfns, offers a full-stack orchestration layer for storing, controlling, moving, and settling digital assets while serving as a central hub for integrating third-party and in-house services.
"As digital assets continue to reshape global finance, institutions face a growing imperative: deliver secured, scalable services with compliance capabilities to meet the expectations of modern users and regulators," said Tina Tarquinio, chief product officer for IBM Z and LinuxONE.
Digital Asset Haven addresses institutional challenges including fragmented systems, limited security maturity, and complex regulatory requirements by unifying digital asset operations under programmable, policy-based governance aligned with enterprise workflows.
The platform enables institutions to rapidly deploy policy-driven wallets and transactions, execute smart contracts with automated signing and dynamic routing, and implement role-based permissions mirroring internal approval chains. APIs and SDKs allow companies to automate wallet creation and embed wallets into applications with multi-chain support.
IBM emphasized flexible key management as a core capability, combining multiple signing models within a single platform. Institutions can select approaches per asset, use case, or jurisdictional requirement, including Multi-Party Computation for distributed signing, Hardware Security Module-based signing for hardware-enforced protection, and Offline Signing Orchestrator for cold wallet operations keeping private keys entirely offline.
The architecture allows institutions to adapt key management strategies across hot, warm, and cold operational tiers while prioritizing control, recoverability, or regulatory requirements.
Security architecture relies on IBM's Confidential Computing capabilities, anchored by IBM Secure Execution for Linux and Hyper Protect Virtual Servers. These technologies provide hardware-enforced isolation so key generation, transaction signing, and access control remain protected from privileged administrators.
"This allows institutions to maintain control over their digital asset infrastructure, while helping to ensure that critical operations remain private and tamper-resistant," IBM stated, noting the protections are designed for regulated industries requiring confidentiality and operational integrity.
The platform includes pre-integrated third-party services for identity verification, financial crime prevention, and yield generation, connecting directly to core banking, wealth, and payment systems to reduce vendor complexity and integration overhead.
Digital Asset Haven will be available through software-as-a-service later in 2025, with on-premises deployment options expected by mid-2026. The platform offers native support for key residency controls and programmable multi-party approvals as cryptocurrency and tokenized asset adoption accelerates.
IBM characterized the launch as a strategic enabler for institutions entering digital asset markets, combining speed, control, security, and resilience to build trusted, scalable services meeting demands of evolving financial ecosystems.
The company's technology portfolio already handles critical data workloads in finance and retail for 95% of Fortune 500 companies across 175 countries. IBM employs approximately 300,000 people and maintains a market capitalization near $287 billion.


