Sygnum Bank’s new Bitcoin fund aims to grow your BTC without selling a satoshi

-

Switzerland’s crypto heavyweight, Sygnum Bank, isn’t messing around. They just dropped the BTC Alpha Fund, a fresh, fancy new product tailored for the institutional crowd itching to bulk up their Bitcoin stash without actually selling any of their existing coins.

It’s like having your Bitcoin cake and eating it with a side of DeFi cream.

Massive runway for yield-hungry investors

Instead of the usual buy low, sell high circus, Sygnum puts your idle Bitcoin to work in arbitrage and DeFi protocols.

All the gains are promptly turned back into Bitcoin. This means investors keep their precious exposure to BTC while watching their holdings quietly balloon in the background. No flipping coins, just steady growth.

The bank’s strategy is rooted in a cool factoid, less than 1% of Bitcoin’s trillion-dollar market cap is doing anything in DeFi right now.

Sygnum calls this a massive runway for yield-hungry investors who want more than just price appreciation. The implication?

There’s a huge opportunity to tap into untouched crypto-lendable gold. Also likely huge risk too.

Stay ahead in the crypto world – follow us on X for the latest updates, insights, and trends!🚀

Limited supply

This fund doesn’t come cheap tho, it’s reserved for the pros and institutional players, the people with big wallets and bigger ambitions.

Markus Hammerli, the man steering this ship, says early interest has been nothing short of impressive.

He also pitched a spicy theory about Bitcoin ETFs, and said that every fresh billion dollars flooding into those funds could bump BTC’s price by 3% to 6%, thanks to the coin’s famously limited supply.

The next wave of crypto riches

In a world where Bitcoin price moves can feel like a rollercoaster designed by a mad genius, Sygnum’s BTC Alpha Fund offers a promising smooth ride, ripping profits from the corners of crypto markets and dumping them back into the coin everyone talks about but few truly understand.

So here’s the real deal, if you’re one of those rarefied institutional types sick of watching Bitcoin sit idle, Sygnum just opened the door to a new era of BTC earning power without the messy hassle of selling.

It’s yield farming for Bitcoin holders who want to stay loyal, stack sats, and maybe, just maybe, ride the next wave of crypto riches with a little less heartburn.


Disclosure:This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

Kriptoworld.com accepts no liability for any errors in the articles or for any financial loss resulting from incorrect information.

András Mészáros
Written by András Mészáros
Cryptocurrency and Web3 expert, founder of Kriptoworld
LinkedIn | X (Twitter) | More articles

With years of experience covering the blockchain space, András delivers insightful reporting on DeFi, tokenization, altcoins, and crypto regulations shaping the digital economy.

📅 Published: October 2, 2025 • 🕓 Last updated: October 2, 2025
✉️ Contact: [email protected]

LATEST POSTS

Sweden Bitcoin Reserve Push: Riksdag Proposal Signals a Digital Arms Race

Two Swedish Democrats—Dennis Dioukarev and David Perez—filed a Riksdag proposal to examine a Sweden Bitcoin reserve as an inflation hedge and diversification tool. They also seek...

How Strategy just snatched another $22 million in Bitcoin

Stacking sats, yes, but Saylor might ask what the hell are sats? Strategy, the Bitcoin treasury juggernaut has quietly snatched up 196 more BTC, scooping...

Alameda Research recovers 500 BTC, is this enough?

The ghost of Alameda Research, that infamous quant hedge fund tangled with FTX’s dramatic collapse, is still crawling with crypto. Alameda’s wallets welcomed a fresh...

Is Massachusetts poised to join the U.S. Bitcoin Reserve race?

Massachusetts might just be gearing up for a big move, parking some of its surplus cash in a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve. On October 7, state lawmakers...

Most Popular

Guest posts