NEW YORK, May 12, 2026 — Elliptic said Tuesday it had secured $120 million in a Series D funding round led by One Peak, with participation from Nasdaq Ventures, Deutsche Bank and the British Business Bank. The company said the funding round values Elliptic at $670 million.
Elliptic said the proceeds will support expansion of its blockchain analytics and compliance infrastructure for banks, fintech firms, government agencies, crypto exchanges and payments companies as digital assets become more integrated into the global financial system.
Institutional investors back digital asset compliance infrastructure
In a statement accompanying the announcement, Nasdaq Ventures Senior Vice President and Head of Nasdaq Ventures Gary Offner said institutions adopting digital assets require “trusted infrastructure” to manage compliance and risk at scale.
Sabih Behzad, Deutsche Bank’s Global Head of Digital Assets & Currencies Transformation, said institutional-grade compliance frameworks are necessary to support the “responsible development” of digital asset markets.
The funding round also included continued backing from existing investors including JPMorgan Chase, AlbionVC and Evolution Equity Partners, according to Elliptic.
Elliptic expands blockchain analytics platform
Founded in 2013, Elliptic said its platform supports monitoring across more than 65 blockchains and processes more than 1 billion transactions weekly for over 700 customers in 30 countries.
The company said the funding will support further development of its AI-driven compliance and risk monitoring systems, which are designed to automate transaction monitoring and compliance investigations at enterprise scale.
Elliptic said its proprietary blockchain data infrastructure enables institutions to conduct real-time monitoring of digital asset activity while reducing operational compliance costs.
Stablecoin activity drives compliance demand
Elliptic said stablecoins processed approximately $33 trillion in transactions during 2025, adding that rising transaction volumes are increasing demand for real-time compliance infrastructure among exchanges, payments firms and financial institutions operating on digital asset networks.
Chief Executive Officer Simone Maini said financial systems are increasingly moving on-chain and that institutions require analytics infrastructure capable of operating at institutional scale.
The announcement comes as financial institutions continue increasing investment and infrastructure exposure to digital asset compliance, tokenization and blockchain-based payment systems.