Liquid Mercury LLC has officially selected BitGo Inc. and BitGo Bank and Trust as their Crypto-as-a-Service provider, integrating BitGo's OCC-regulated, NYSE-listed (BTGO) institutional custody and settlement across its entire product suite, including Mercury Pro, Mercury OTC, and Mercury RWA. This expanded partnership provides critical infrastructure, including $250 million in insurance coverage, establishing a robust foundation for the $MERC ecosystem and institutional client onboarding. The deal signals a significant step towards institutional-grade compliance and security in the digital asset space. Key Highlights: • Liquid Mercury has selected OCC-regulated BitGo as its Crypto-as-a-Service provider, integrating BitGo's institutional-grade custody and settlement across its entire product suite. • This expanded partnership provides multi-signature cold storage, compliance frameworks, and $250 million in insurance coverage for Mercury Pro, Mercury OTC, and Mercury RWA. • The BitGo integration addresses institutional friction points by offering qualified custody and settlement workflows that mirror traditional market standards for derivatives and high-volume trades. • For the $MERC ecosystem, this infrastructure deal establishes a robust, federally chartered foundation for future utility expansion and tokenized real-world asset development. Topics: Liquid Mercury, BitGo, Crypto-as-a-Service, RWA, Tokenized Assets, Qualified Custody, OCC Regulation, Institutional Crypto, $MERC, Derivatives, OTC Trading, Digital Asset Trust Bank --- TRANSCRIPT Special: Liquid Mercury × BitGo — The $MERC Setup. Welcome back to Crypto RWA Brief — I'm Ceres Quinn, and today we're running a special episode because there is an infrastructure announcement that deserves your full attention. Liquid Mercury LLC has officially selected BitGo Inc. and BitGo Bank and Trust as their Crypto-as-a-Service provider — and this is not a partial arrangement, it covers every single product in the Liquid Mercury suite. That means Mercury Pro — their spot, options, futures, and perpetuals platform — Mercury OTC, their electronic over-the-counter desk for high-volume trades, and Mercury RWA, their tokenized real-world asset vertical covering sports investments and alternative assets. Now let's put BitGo in context, because this is where the announcement gets serious. BitGo is OCC-regulated — meaning they operate under the same federal oversight framework as traditional banks — they trade on the NYSE under ticker BTGO, and they carry up to two hundred and fifty million dollars in insurance coverage. BitGo is also the first federally chartered digital asset trust bank owned by a public company — that distinction matters and I'll come back to it. When you hear the term qualified custody, here's what that means in plain English: your assets are held by a regulated institution that is legally obligated to segregate and protect them, the same way a prime broker would in traditional markets. BitGo brings multi-signature cold storage, compliance frameworks, and settlement infrastructure — they have been building this since 2013, and they are now the backbone across Liquid Mercury's entire product architecture. Importantly, this is not a new relationship starting from scratch — this is an expanded partnership, deepening technical ties that were already in place between these two firms. The $MERC ticker is the one to keep on your radar, and today's episode is about understanding exactly why this infrastructure deal is the foundation everything else gets built on. Let's get into why this deal actually matters — because when you look at what Liquid Mercury has built across its product suite, the BitGo integration is not cosmetic. Mercury Pro covers the full derivatives stack — spot, options, futures, perpetuals — and every single one of those products now settles into BitGo qualified custody with post-trade workflows built for institutional participants. That means a hedge fund or prop desk trading perpetuals on Mercury Pro is not just getting execution — they're getting a custody and settlement layer that maps onto the same operational standards they expect from traditional prime brokerage. Mercury OTC is the electronic platform for high-volume block trades, and here the regulated custody on settlement is arguably the headline feature — because for any institution moving size, the question is always: where does it go after the trade clears, and who is holding it? That question now has a clean, credible answer. Then you have Mercury RWA — tokenized real-world assets, sports investments, alternative asset categories — and this is where the BitGo infrastructure story gets genuinely compelling, because BitGo is not just custodying assets here, they are the rails for issuance, trading, and ongoing management of tokenized positions. Tony Saliba put it plainly: clients want institutional-grade infrastructure like traditional markets — and that framing matters, because it signals Liquid Mercury is building for the same participants who already demand segregated custody, compliance frameworks, and counterparty credibility before they allocate. BitGo CRO Chen Fang described BitGo as the infrastructure backbone for Liquid Mercury's full product suite, and that language is deliberate — this is not a point solution, it is a horizontal architecture play across every product vertical. The two hundred fifty million dollars in insurance coverage is a real differentiator in this space — that is industry-leading coverage that moves the conversation from trust us to here is the documented downside protection — which is exactly what institutional compliance desks need to see. And BitGo's credibility here is not theoretical — they have been operating since 2013, they are publicly traded on NYSE as BTGO, and that OCC-regulated wrapper is a genuine institutional signal, not a talking point. Now let's talk about who this deal actually speaks to — because the answer is both sides of the market, and in different but equally meaningful ways. For institutional players — asset managers, family offices, trading desks looking at Mercury Pro or Mercury OTC — the BitGo integration removes what has historically been the single biggest friction point: post-trade custody and compliance infrastructure that meets the same standard you'd expect in traditional markets. Qualified custody, OCC-regulated oversight, multi-sig cold storage, up to two hundred fifty million in insurance coverage — that is not a checkbox, that is a mandate cleared. Settlement workflows across Pro and OTC are now standardized against a federally chartered custodian that trades publicly on the NYSE as BTGO — that is the kind of counterparty risk profile that gets past institutional due diligence committees. And on Mercury RWA specifically, you now have real settlement rails for tokenized alternatives — sports investments, private assets, the categories that have always made sense on paper but needed credible infrastructure to move volume. For the retail and ecosystem community tracking $MERC — this is your layer one moment for the product stack; you're watching the foundation get poured, and that matters more than most people give it credit for. The platforms you'll eventually interact with are being built on custody and compliance architecture that mirrors what institutional desks demand — that makes for a safer, more durable ecosystem for everyone participating in it. Now let's talk about what this deal signals for the $MERC ecosystem specifically — because the infrastructure story is really the pre-game. When a platform locks in qualified custody, OCC-regulated compliance, and up to two hundred fifty million in insurance coverage before the broader ecosystem rollout, that is not a coincidence — that is sequencing. Tony Saliba does not build casually. Market Wizards. LiquidPoint. Matrix Executions. This is an operator who constructs architecture first and sca...