Start now →

State Street says institutions want improved blockchain security in wake of recent DeFi attacks

By Ian Allison · Published May 5, 2026 · 4 min read · Source: CoinDesk
DeFiRegulationBlockchainSecurity
FinanceShare this articleX (Twitter)LinkedInFacebookEmail

State Street says institutions want improved blockchain security in wake of recent DeFi attacks

Angus Fletcher, State Street’s head of digital assets said the young crypto industry needs to find solutions now before trillions in RWAs come on-chain.

By Ian Allison|Edited by Stephen Alpher May 5, 2026, 9:27 p.m. 2 min readMake preferred on
Angus Fletcher, State Street’s head of digital assets (left) and Morpho head of institutional, Dennis Bree
Angus Fletcher, State Street’s head of digital assets (left) and Morpho head of institutional, Dennis Bree

What to know:

Big traditional finance firms need guardrails in a world of blockchain-based assets, particularly given how decentralized finance (DeFi) remains so susceptible to hacks and losses, the head of digital assets at custodial banking giant State Street said on Tuesday at Consensus Miami.

Still fresh in people’s minds, last month turned out to be a hacker’s bonanza in DeFi, with on-chain lending protocol Drift suffering a $295 million exploit early April, followed by a similarly sized attack on KelpDAO later in the month.

Speaking about the future of tokenized real-world assets (RWAs), Angus Fletcher, State Street’s head of digital assets, said the young crypto industry needs to find solutions now. “What are the things we actually need to solve now for a future where we've got trillions of dollars worth of activity on-chain? We need to start to unpick those issues now,” Fletcher said.

For institutions, interoperability between blockchains needs to be clearly defined and understood, Fletcher said, for crypto to safely scale.

“There has to be an understanding of what is the legal title and legal right when you have a token on one chain versus on another, on a cross chain basis. Our customers need to know and understand that. As institutions, it's critical we get there,” he said.

The head of institutional at the blockchain lending protocol Morpho, Dennis Bree, said April was probably the month that has seen the most hacks in DeFi so far. “I think there's just a general sense of understanding the security vectors, the underlying assets that are used as collateral. And we're starting now, certainly to see curators do a lot more diligence as we think about the risk of some of those assets,” Bree said.

The everyday barriers to institutional involvement included a plethora of regulatory gray areas, Bree said. He said Morpho has curators coming to them with $10 to $15 billion in assets under management, seeking to understand how a digital vault manages that capital.

“For example, when you've got your capital, and you bring it into a blockchain, you have a receipt token, and instead of receipt tokens just increasing by number, they increase by value. So how does the CFO of a treasury firm think about the accounting treatment of that?”

Consensus Miami 2026

More For You

Different voices in product, policy and hiring change crypto outcomes, panelists tell Consensus Miami

By Jeffrey Albus|Edited by Nikhilesh De4 minutes ago
Alexandra Wilkis Wilson, Alison Mangiero, Maja Lapcevic, Joanna Waswick (CoinDesk)

Senior leaders from Mastercard, the Crypto Council for Innovation and Clerisy said the right people in the right rooms can reshape internal decisions, citing examples from stablecoin-linked cards and financial access to staking-policy framing in Washington.

What to know:

Read full storyLatest Crypto News Alexandra Wilkis Wilson, Alison Mangiero, Maja Lapcevic, Joanna Waswick (CoinDesk)

Different voices in product, policy and hiring change crypto outcomes, panelists tell Consensus Miami

4 minutes ago
Stephanie Cohen (CoinDesk)

AI agents are breaking web economics, but Cloudflare says x402 can help

13 minutes ago
Miami Consensus 2026

Kraken eyes IPO as it partners with MoneyGram to bridge crypto-to-cash gap

32 minutes ago
Dan Romero, GTM at Tempo, speaking at Consensus 2026 in Miami (CoinDesk)

Crypto's 'barbell': speculation and stablecoin payments drive adoption, Tempo's Romero says

36 minutes ago
Ryan Rugg, Head of Digital Assets, Treasury and Trade Solutions at Citi at Consensus Miami (CoinDesk)

Citi exec says fragmented crypto systems risk repeating old banking problems

38 minutes ago
Johann Kerbrat Senior Vice President and General Manager, Crypto and International Robinhood. (CoinDesk)

Overseas demand for U.S. equities is growing, says Robinhood's Johan Kerbrart

41 minutes ago
Top StoriesStrategy Executive Chairman Michael Saylor on CoinDesk Television

Strategy posts $12.54 billion Q1 loss on declining bitcoin price

1 hour ago
Bitcoin (BTC) price on May 5 (CoinDesk)

Bitcoin extends gains to $81,500 as tokenization push lifts Bullish, Galaxy, Centrifuge

3 hours ago
Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse, Consensus 2026 in Miami

Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse says Clarity better than chaos as Senate hits key moment

5 hours ago
Consensus Miami 2026 Registration at the Miami Beach Convention Center

Consensus Miami Day 1: Real-time coverage and highlights from on the ground

8 hours ago
Mike Cagney at Consensus Miami 2026

Figure targets Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in mortgage push, citing massive cost cuts for borrowers

4 hours ago
Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong (Nikhilesh De/CoinDesk)

Coinbase cuts 14% of staff as AI reshapes how crypto companies operate

10 hours ago
This article was originally published on CoinDesk and is republished here under RSS syndication for informational purposes. All rights and intellectual property remain with the original author. If you are the author and wish to have this article removed, please contact us at [email protected].

NexaPay — Accept Card Payments, Receive Crypto

No KYC · Instant Settlement · Visa, Mastercard, Apple Pay, Google Pay

Get Started →