XION, a consumer-centric layer-1 blockchain built for mass onboarding, has integrated with Fireblocks, a leading digital-asset custodian, to bring XION’s walletless experience to more than 2,400 financial institutions.
Fireblocks has added support for XION, with native availability of the walletless, gasless layer-1 set to be accessible to thousands of institutions.
The crypto ecosystem continues to attract huge attention from banks and other large global institutions. However, as XION noted in a blog post, “the bridge to adoption often seems risky for major players”.
A custody and settlement stack that enables easy integration is essential for this client base. With more than $10 trillion in digital-asset transactions secured via its rails, Fireblocks’ role in crypto adoption is pivotal.
This strategic integration paves the way for mass institutional adoption of XION, allowing institutions to tap the network directly through trusted custody and settlement rails.
XION will benefit from the traction that corporate treasuries, funds, market makers, and exchanges bring to the network.
For large institutions, the integration enables evaluation of counterparty risk, settlement speed, and custody controls, without relying on bridging projects that often slow adoption.
XION introduced its native utility token in August 2024, and became the first MiCA-compliant blockchain in March 2025. The Multicoin and Circle-backed platform now hits another milestone as it joins the likes of Solana, Sui and Avalanche on the list of layer 1 blockchain networks that integrate with Fireblocks.



Canada’s government unveiled a plan to regulate stablecoins, requiring fiat-backed issuers to maintain sufficient reserves and adopt robust risk management measures. Canada is set to introduce legislation regulating fiat-backed stablecoins under its federal budget for 2025, following the footsteps of the US, which passed landmark stablecoin laws in July.Stablecoin issuers will be required to hold sufficient reserves, establish redemption policies and implement various risk management frameworks, including measures to protect personal and financial data, according to the government’s 2025 budget released on Tuesday.The Bank of Canada would allocate $10 million over two years, starting in the 2026-2027 fiscal year, to ensure everything runs smoothly, followed by an estimated $5 million in annual costs that will be offset from stablecoin issuers regulated under the Retail Payment Activities Act.Read more