Bybit’s integration with Cactus Custody introduces an off-exchange settlement system that keeps assets locked down until trades clear, drastically reducing counterparty exposure and potentially neutralizing one of crypto’s oldest threats.
Summary
According to a press release dated July 23, cryptocurrency exchange Bybit has partnered with Cactus Custody, a licensed digital asset custodian under Matrixport Group, to integrate Cactus Oasis. This institutional-grade settlement layer removes the need for pre-funded exchange accounts.
Under the new system, assets remain under Cactus Custody’s control until the moment of trade execution, only moving to Bybit for final settlement. The integration, set to go live on July 28, targets hedge funds, proprietary trading firms, and other institutions that have been hesitant to engage in crypto markets due to counterparty risks and capital inefficiencies.
Cactus Oasis functions as a custody-backed airlock between institutions and exchanges. Rather than depositing funds directly onto Bybit, traders allocate collateral to Cactus Custody’s segregated accounts, which are regulated and SOC 2-audited vaults that only release assets when trades are executed.
Cactus Custody stated that the system utilizes buffer accounts to consolidate liquidity across multiple exchanges, allowing institutions on Bybit’s platform to trade without scattering capital across pre-funded balances.
For institutional traders, this means capital no longer sits idle or exposed on exchanges. A hedge fund can now deploy $100 million across Bybit and rival platforms while keeping the bulk secured under Cactus’ custody, freeing up liquidity that would otherwise be trapped.
“We are committed to providing our institutional clients with secure, efficient, and flexible trading solutions. Integrating Cactus Oasis enhances our offering, enabling institutions to manage liquidity more effectively without sacrificing asset security, ” Shunyet Jan, Head of Institutional and Derivatives at Bybit, said.
The timing of this partnership isn’t incidental. Five months after Lazarus Group’s $1.5 billion heist nearly toppled Bybit, the exchange is methodically reassembling its institutional appeal.
Emergency loans from industry peers kept it afloat, but the hack exposed a fatal flaw in crypto’s status quo: exchanges as de facto banks, holding assets hostage to their solvency.
Cactus Custody’s solution offers Bybit more than risk mitigation; it’s a reputational reset. By ensuring client funds never reside on its books before trade, Bybit effectively insulates itself (and its users) from the next potential breach. It’s a structural fix that even regulators might applaud; Hong Kong’s SFC has quietly encouraged such custody‑execution splits since 2024’s custody rule updates under its Safeguards roadmap.