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UK Startups and Innovation
7JUN

Elliptic closes $120m crypto compliance round

4 min read
10:09UTC

Elliptic, London's blockchain analytics company, closed a $120m Series D on 12 May at a $670m valuation, with Nasdaq Ventures and Deutsche Bank co-investing alongside the British Business Bank's £13m contribution.

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Key takeaway

Elliptic's $120m round with Nasdaq Ventures and Deutsche Bank confirms institutional demand for external crypto compliance tooling over in-house builds.

Elliptic, London's blockchain analytics and crypto compliance company, closed a $120m Series D on 12 May 2026 at a $670m valuation. 1 One Peak led; Nasdaq Ventures, Deutsche Bank, and the British Business Bank (BBB) co-invested. The BBB contributed £13m using two instruments simultaneously: the British Growth Partnership Fund I and the core BBB balance sheet, demonstrating broader use of the expanded toolkit the bank received from April 2026.

Elliptic screens over one billion crypto transactions weekly for more than 700 customers across 30 countries. Its platform serves institutional compliance teams at banks, exchanges, and asset managers navigating the Financial Conduct Authority's (FCA) 2026 liberalisation of crypto and digital assets authorisation in the UK. The FCA named its second AI Live Testing cohort on 21 April 2026 , a regulatory signal that institutional financial services players are actively building infrastructure to operate in the new regulatory environment.

The co-investor profile carries structural weight. Nasdaq Ventures investing in crypto compliance signals that a major exchange operator is building a financial interest in the governance infrastructure of the asset class it lists. Deutsche Bank's participation alongside Nasdaq Ventures suggests two distinct institutional motivations: exchange infrastructure and traditional banking compliance convergence on the same compliance tooling. Neither is building these capabilities in-house; both are taking equity positions in the external provider.

The dual BBB instrument use in a single deal is a technical signal worth tracking. The bank's direct mandate permits it to deploy capital through multiple vehicles simultaneously; doing so in a $670m-valuation deal tests whether the two instruments create any pricing tension or whether they operate as a unified position. No BBB statement has addressed the mechanics of multi-instrument co-investment pricing. For Elliptic, $120m at $670m valuation implies a substantial premium to revenue; the combined BBB position at that valuation sets a data point for how public capital prices itself in late-stage fintech infrastructure rounds.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Elliptic is a London company that checks cryptocurrency transactions for signs of money laundering, fraud, and sanctions violations. When a bank or a crypto exchange wants to make sure their customers are not involved in illegal activity, they use tools like Elliptic's to screen transactions automatically. On 12 May 2026, Elliptic raised $120m from investors including Nasdaq (the US stock exchange), Deutsche Bank, and the British Business Bank. The company is now valued at $670m. The FCA, the UK's financial regulator, has been making it easier for companies to get authorised to handle crypto assets in 2026, which has increased demand for the compliance tools Elliptic sells.

First Reported In

Update #4 · State capital lands on UK tech in nine days

Elliptic (confirmed by Bloomberg, CoinDesk, The Block)· 13 May 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Elliptic closes $120m crypto compliance round
Elliptic's round shows institutional financial infrastructure players investing directly in crypto compliance rather than building it in-house, and the BBB deploying two instruments simultaneously (the British Growth Partnership Fund I and its core balance sheet) in a single deal for the first time.
Different Perspectives
Spanish state finance (COFIDES, CDTI)
Spanish state finance (COFIDES, CDTI)
Spain's COFIDES and CDTI have co-invested alongside UK deep-tech rounds in prior cycles and track the British Business Bank's direct-investment activity as a benchmark for state-capital deployment in innovation. BBB's two direct co-investments in one week set a pace reference for Iberian equivalents.
UK city-region mayors (Greater Manchester, West Midlands, Liverpool)
UK city-region mayors (Greater Manchester, West Midlands, Liverpool)
The LIPF devolution from 2027 hands seven mayors direct grant allocation, cutting Whitehall from the approval chain. Liverpool's £23.7m first allocation to AI research programmes shows the mechanism working before the formal devolution date.
Japanese strategic investors
Japanese strategic investors
OQC already generates hardware revenue in Japan, one of four countries where its quantum systems are live. Japan's national quantum strategy targets 2030 for commercial adoption; a UK supplier with active Japanese contracts is a supply-chain asset before domestic fabrication scales.
European venture capital (Highland Europe, Plural, Index Ventures)
European venture capital (Highland Europe, Plural, Index Ventures)
European funds led or co-led three of the week's rounds: Highland Europe and Index Ventures on Wordsmith, Plural on Gigaton, Singular on Apoha. Continental LP capital is backing UK deep-tech and software at Series A and B without waiting for US validation.
US growth investors
US growth investors
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UK Government (DSIT)
UK Government (DSIT)
DSIT published Horizon recovery figures, Global Talent Fund recruitment numbers and the LIPF devolution announcement on overlapping days in June, framing a triple proof-point for its innovation agenda. The co-timing signals a deliberate narrative strategy linking talent, funding geography and international re-engagement into a single story.