Institutions do not tiptoe into new eras. They arrive late, loud, and only when the plumbing can handle the weight. That is the tension running through “Institutions Enter the Digital Asset Era,” published January 16, 2026 in Traders Magazine and written by Senior Writer Anna Lyudvig. This was not a crypto headline chasing clicks. This was a market structure publication, founded in 1987, telling buy side professionals that something once considered fringe has earned a seat next to equities, fixed income, and FX.
The distinction matters because authorship matters. This was not a founder opining about the future. Anna Lyudvig reported it. Fifteen years of institutional market coverage, writing for an audience that lives and dies by execution quality, regulatory clarity, and operational risk. When Traders Magazine runs digital assets under its institutional banner, it signals that speculation has given way to systems, governance, and accountability.
At the center of the article sits C1 Fund Inc., trading on the NYSE as CFND, and its President, CEO, and Co Founder Dr. Najamul Hasan Kidwai. The premise is clean and slightly contrarian. No tokens. No price chasing. C1 Fund focuses on private digital asset infrastructure companies while they are still private, using a closed end fund structure to give public market investors exposure normally reserved for venture firms and sovereign capital. Picks and shovels, but audited, regulated, and tradeable.
This timing is not accidental. Banks like BNY Mellon and State Street are rolling out tokenized cash and digital asset platforms. Spot Bitcoin ETFs have normalized regulated access. Compliance frameworks have names, acronyms, and enforcement paths. In that environment, infrastructure companies stop being experimental and start being required. That is the lane C1 Fund is playing, buying secondary positions in companies that already survived the volatility and learned how to operate under scrutiny.
The article lands as institutions are no longer asking if digital assets belong in the portfolio, but where the exposure should live. Equity versus tokens. Infrastructure versus velocity. Operating cash flows versus narrative. Dr. Najamul Hasan Kidwai’s perspective carries weight here because it comes from capital actually being deployed, not theory being debated. The difference shows up in tone, and Traders Magazine readers can smell that from a mile away.


