Why family offices are skipping exchanges when investing in crypto
For years, the most common entry point into crypto markets was simple: Investors opened accounts on large exchanges such as Binance or Coinbase, bought Bitcoin, and managed their exposure directly. For individuals and early adopters, this approach made sense. For family offices, it increasingly does not.
As allocations grow and scrutiny increases, many family offices are reassessing how they access speculative asset classes like crypto. The result is a gradual shift away from direct exchange-based investing and toward professionally managed fund structures that reduce operational and custodial risk.
Exchanges were the first step, not the final one
Major exchanges like Binance and Coinbase have played a central role in crypto adoption. They lowered barriers to entry and provided liquidity at scale. Even today, they remain a natural starting point for many investors exploring digital assets for the first time.
However, for family offices, exchanges come with trade-offs. Assets are typically held in omnibus wallets, counterparty risk is concentrated, and operational responsibility ultimately sits with the investor. High-profile failures – like FTX – and regulatory actions over recent years have highlighted these weaknesses.
According to industry estimates, more than USD 10 billion in customer assets have been lost or frozen due to exchange collapses, hacks, or operational failures over the past decade. For family offices focused on capital preservation and governance, these risks are difficult to justify beyond small, experimental allocations.
“Exchanges were designed for simple access and liquidity, not for institutional allocators,” says Tom Hickey, Head of Distribution at Neverwinter Bitcoin Fund. “For family offices, that’s an important distinction.”
Custody and control drive structural change
Custody has emerged as a defining issue. While exchanges offer convenience, they also require investors to accept counterparty exposure that sits outside traditional custody models. Family offices, accustomed to segregated accounts and third-party oversight, often find this uncomfortable.
Professionally managed funds offer an alternative. Assets are typically held with institutional custody providers, using cold storage, segregation, and formal security controls. This allows family offices to separate market risk from operational risk, a principle that underpins most institutional investment processes.
that more than 60 percent of family offices with crypto exposure now prefer managed vehicles over direct exchange holdings, citing custody and operational risk as the primary reasons. Among those allocating through funds, confidence in asset safeguarding consistently ranks above return expectations.
“Family offices don’t spend their time optimising wallet security,” Hickey says. “They want structures where custody is someone else’s full-time responsibility.”
From trading accounts to portfolio allocations
Another factor is how crypto fits within the broader portfolio. Exchange-based investing often leads to tactical, trade-driven exposure. Funds, by contrast, allow crypto to be treated as a defined allocation alongside other alternatives.
Many crypto funds now offer diversified exposure across assets or strategies, rather than reliance on a single position. This can include directional exposure, hedged strategies, or systematic approaches designed to manage volatility. The emphasis is on structure rather than speculation.
Neverwinter operates within this professional framework, reflecting a broader industry trend toward institutional-style portfolio construction in crypto. While approaches vary, the common theme is governance: clear mandates, defined risk limits, and regular reporting.
Cost, scale, and execution quality
Scale also changes the economics of crypto investing. Institutional funds benefit from lower trading fees and better execution through established relationships with exchanges and liquidity providers. For active strategies, this can translate into significant performance differences.
Data from trading venues shows that institutional participants often pay 30 to 60 percent less in transaction fees than retail investors. Over time, these savings compound, particularly in volatile markets where repositioning is frequent.
Technology reinforces these advantages. Algorithmic execution and data-driven models are now standard across many professional crypto funds, helping manage exposure in real time. Building and maintaining such systems internally is rarely practical for family offices.
“Execution quality is invisible when it works and painfully visible when it doesn’t,” Hickey notes. “That is one reason many families prefer to outsource it.”
A more institutional path forward
The move away from exchanges does not imply that family offices are abandoning crypto. On the contrary, interest remains strong. What is changing is the preferred access point.
By using professionally managed funds, family offices can participate in volatile asset classes like Bitcoin while limiting exposure to operational failures and custodial risk. As crypto markets continue to evolve, this shift toward managed, institutionally aligned structures suggests that exchanges were a gateway, not the destination, for long-term capital.

