Fidelity Clearing Canada to Become First Bitcoin Custodian in Canada

On Nov 18, 2021 at 1:20 pm UTC by · 3 mins read

The Fidelity approval as the inaugural Bitcoin custodian in Canada seemingly paves the way for more Canadian acts to follow.

Fidelity Clearing Canada ULC (FCC) is the first regulated institution in Canada to become a Bitcoin custodian. FCC secured the approval on Wednesday from the Investment Industry Regulatory Organization of Canada (IIROC). This means that the financial powerhouse will start offering trading services to institutional investors, allowing them to buy, sell and hold the crypto. Fidelity Clearing Canada president Scott Mackenzie issued a statement on Wednesday, part of which read:

“The demand for investing in digital assets is growing considerably and institutional investors have been looking for a regulated dealer platform to access this asset class. Fidelity Clearing Canada is pleased to offer our new solution, leveraging Fidelity’s global expertise and deep knowledge of digital assets for leading Canadian institutional investors.”

What Fidelity Being Canada’s First Bitcoin Custodian Means

The custody and trading platform to be provided by FCC does not provide direct access to BTC for retail investors. Instead, it provides an avenue for institutional investors who want some exposure to the digital asset. Many of these institutional investors operating in Canada currently use the services of custodians based in the United States. Such institutional players include portfolio managers, pension funds, exchange-traded funds, and mutual funds. Also, as hinted in Mackenzie’s statement, the Bitcoin custody approval would likely pave the way for other Canadian institutions to invest in crypto.

FCC currently caters to more than 100 investment companies in Canada. In addition, the firm has more than 209 billion Canadian dollars ($166 billion) in assets under management. In conjunction with Fidelity Investments Canada ULC, the total AUM figure is $222 billion as of June 30th, 2021.

Earlier in the week, Fidelity Investments Canada ULC filed a preliminary prospectus with regulators for a bitcoin ETF and bitcoin mutual fund. Respectively named the Fidelity Advantage Bitcoin ETF and Fidelity Advantage Bitcoin ETF Fund, the former will leverage FCC’s custodian services.

According to Mackenzie, this could not have come at a better time. This is because the firm already operates one in the US and provides a “four-year runway” for its Canadian counterpart. The latter can benefit immensely, especially in the processes that lead up to setting a Bitcoin fund in the crypto marketplace.

Fidelity Investments Inc. initially launched a crypto service, called Fidelity Digital Assets and based in the US, back in 2018. In that time, US institutional investors have been enjoying BTC custody and trade execution services. In May this year, the US Bitcoin fund, accessible only to accredited investors, raised about $102 million from affluent investors.

Fidelity Seems to Have a Lot Riding on Digital Currencies

Fidelity seems considerably bullish on crypto and its longevity. This bullishness might be based on crypto’s penetration of the mainstream institutional finance space. Consequently, the firm is carving out more of a crypto role and ‘aligning’ itself with digital currency offerings.

Share:

Related Articles

Bitcoin Slides Below $73K as Mining Stocks Sink in Double-Digit Selloff

By February 4th, 2026

Bitcoin fell below $73.000 for the second time since April 2025, extending losses to 40% from its October peak while mining companies posted double-digit declines.

Bitcoin Dips Below $73K Amid 50,000 BTC Whale Sell-Off, Can the End of the US Shutdown Boost the Market?

By February 4th, 2026

Bitcoin’s price briefly fell below $73,000 for the first time since April 2025, pressured by heavy whale selling.

Bitcoin Exchange Reserve Surges, Market Needs Fresh Demand

By February 3rd, 2026

Bitcoin sees rising exchange inflows and sustained supply pressure as price trades near $78,000.

Exit mobile version