Two physically backed ETPs on Bitcoin and Ethereum introduce an on-chain proof of reserve published on Arbitrum via Chainlink Proof of Reserve, as confirmed by Crypto Finance and documented by Chainlink and the related technical deep dive on the official blog. The data, public, cryptographic, and independently verifiable, allow investors and auditors to transparently verify the backing of the assets. The announcement, communicated on September 24, 2025, involved Crypto Finance (regulated custodian, part of the Deutsche Börse group), nxtAssets (issuer), and Chainlink (oracles).
According to public data from Chainlink, the Proof of Reserve solution has verified over 17 billion dollars in reserves and supports more than 40 active feeds. By analyzing the public feeds available on data.chain.link and the recorded outputs on Arbitrum, it is possible to check timestamps and update history, providing concrete elements for auditability. Industry analysts observe that the adoption of PoR on layer-2 like Arbitrum facilitates scalability and on-chain writing costs, accelerating data availability for auditors and institutional investors.
The on-chain update model allows for more continuous reserve monitoring compared to traditional end-of-day reports, thus offering a measurable level of transparency for investors and auditors without exposing sensitive addresses. In this context, data visibility is enhanced by automated attestation procedures.
ETP is the acronym for Exchange‑Traded Product, while NAV (Net Asset Value) and AUM (Assets Under Management) respectively indicate the net asset value and the total assets under management. MiCAR is the EU regulatory framework for crypto‑asset markets, and CRE is the Chainlink runtime environment for off‑chain orchestration. It should be noted that these references define the operational and regulatory perimeter.
The solution employs decentralized oracles to publish an on‑chain aggregated indicator of reserves in custody. The Proof of Reserve, through cryptographic verifications and attestation processes, demonstrates that the balances held fully cover the ETPs, without replacing the traditional end-of-day attestations already in operation. In fact, the two systems are complementary.
The data is recorded on Arbitrum, ensuring immutability and allowing historical traceability of transactions. The output is designed to avoid the exposure of addresses or keys, thus reducing operational risks and complying with the standards imposed on regulated custodians. That said, the setup aims to balance transparency and confidentiality.
The approach adopted does not replace the governance of the ETP or regulatory compliance, but rather adds an observable layer that facilitates controls and due diligence. In this sense, an additional and independent verification channel is created.
The datasets are published on Arbitrum via feeds and contracts updated by Chainlink’s CRE. To practically verify the data, access is provided through public and independent tools.
Note: the direct link to the feed/contract on Arbitrum was not included in the official material and will need to be obtained through the official channels of the issuer or the custodian. However, once the address is identified, consultation is immediate.
The Chainlink Runtime Environment coordinates connectors and publishing jobs. Custodial balances are aggregated and digitally signed, sent to oracles, and subsequently recorded on‑chain. This allows for the creation of a persistent and easily verifiable trail while maintaining the confidentiality of addresses and keys.
The on-chain publication aims to reduce reliance on attestations conducted only on a daily basis, although there are no official details yet on the frequency of updates. Nevertheless, the system’s design is oriented towards data continuity.
Continuous verification allows for independent and recurring checks, reducing the risk of discrepancies between the NAV and the reserves actually held, and supports more thorough due diligence. In this way, observability improves without burdening the processes.
The administrator continues to publish the end-of-day NAV; the Proof of Reserve adds an additional public and automated layer of transparency, without affecting operational governance. That said, regulatory responsibility remains unchanged.
Crypto Finance manages regulated custody, confirmed by the Swiss regulatory framework and the MiCAR license obtained by Crypto Finance (Deutschland) GmbH on January 25, 2025 (Crypto Finance), while Chainlink provides the oracle infrastructure and Proof of Reserve, ensuring that on‑chain data meet high compliance standards.


