Survey Reveals 65% of Institutional Investors Consider Crypto a Key Portfolio Diversification Tool

A growing number of institutional investors are embracing digital assets, driven by improving sentiment and the emergence of new use cases, according to a recent survey conducted by Nomura and its digital assets division, Laser Digital. The survey, which gathered responses from over 500 investment professionals in Japan, found that 31% of respondents now have a positive outlook on crypto for the next year, up from 25% in 2024. Meanwhile, the decline in negative sentiment suggests a gradual shift in perception as the asset class continues to mature. A key finding is that 65% of respondents view crypto as a vital diversification tool for their portfolios, with 79% of those considering investment planning to do so within the next three years. Most institutions anticipate allocating between 2% and 5% of their portfolios to crypto, indicating that they are still in the early stages of adoption. This shift is being supported by a changing regulatory landscape. In Japan, policymakers have spent the past year refining crypto frameworks, including discussions around classification, taxation, and investor protection. Globally, clearer regulations in major markets, combined with the approval and expansion of crypto investment products such as ETFs and tokenized assets, have reduced some of the uncertainty that previously kept institutions on the sidelines. As a result, interest in crypto is expanding beyond simple price exposure, with over 60% of respondents expressing interest in staking, lending, derivatives, and tokenized assets, reflecting a growing demand for yield-generating strategies and more sophisticated portfolio construction. Stablecoins are also gaining traction, with 63% of respondents identifying potential use cases ranging from treasury management to cross-border payments and investment in tokenized securities. However, barriers to adoption remain, including concerns around volatility, counterparty risk, and the lack of established valuation frameworks. Regulatory uncertainty, although improving, has not been fully eliminated. Nevertheless, the survey suggests that the conversation around crypto is shifting, with institutions increasingly focused on how to invest in digital assets, rather than debating whether to do so, indicating that crypto is moving closer to becoming a standard component of institutional portfolios.