Cryptocurrency exchange Kraken, through its parent company Payward, has announced the acquisition of Magna, a Web3 token management and vesting platform often described as the “Carta for crypto.”
The deal represents Kraken’s sixth acquisition in the past 12 months and signals a broader push to build vertically integrated infrastructure ahead of a potential public listing.
While financial terms were not disclosed, Magna was last valued at approximately $70 million during its previous funding round.
Kraken’s strategy increasingly extends beyond exchange services.
Magna will continue operating as a standalone platform powered by Kraken, but its integration significantly expands Kraken’s reach into early-stage project infrastructure. Rather than simply listing tokens once they launch, Kraken is positioning itself to support projects from formation through token distribution and long-term lifecycle management.
This move complements Kraken’s record $1.5 billion acquisition of NinjaTrader in March 2025, which expanded its footprint in U.S. retail futures markets. Together, these acquisitions reflect a shift toward diversified financial infrastructure rather than reliance solely on spot trading volumes.
Magna has built a reputation as a core operational layer for Web3 projects.
The platform manages token equity distribution and vesting schedules for more than 160 clients. It automates both on-chain and off-chain processes, including token unlocks, structured vesting programs, airdrops, and white-label token claims.
Magna supports several major blockchain ecosystems, including Ethereum, Solana, Aptos, and Filecoin. This multi-chain capability allows projects to manage complex token distributions across different networks without fragmented tooling.
During the 2025 crypto market surge, Magna reported a peak Total Value Locked (TVL) of $60 billion, a sharp increase from roughly $2 billion in mid-2024. That growth underscored the increasing complexity of token distribution and treasury management during expansion cycles.
Kraken Co-CEO Arjun Sethi described investment in “chain-aware infrastructure” as essential to preventing excessive consolidation in the digital asset ecosystem. By acquiring Magna, Kraken strengthens its ability to engage builders at the earliest stages of development.
Instead of competing only for secondary market liquidity, Kraken can now provide institutional-grade tools for fundraising, token issuance, vesting compliance, and operational transparency. This reduces friction for issuers while potentially anchoring projects within Kraken’s broader ecosystem from inception.
As exchanges face tightening margins and regulatory scrutiny, infrastructure ownership is increasingly viewed as a defensible moat. With six acquisitions in a year, Kraken appears focused on assembling an end-to-end crypto services stack, a strategy that could shape its valuation narrative if IPO plans move forward.
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