Cryptocurrency IRA Firms Are Springing Up Around Los Angeles

Pat Maio
Pat Maio has held various reporting and editorial management positions over the past 25 years, having specialized in business and government reporting. He has held reporting jobs with the San Diego Union-Tribune, Orange County Register, Dow Jones News and other newspapers in Ohio, West Virginia, Maryland and Washington, D.C.
Cryptocurrency IRA Firms Are Springing Up Around Los Angeles
Photo by Viktor Forgacs on Unsplash

Despite a rattled market and an uncertain regulatory future, cryptocurrencies continue to entrench themselves further in the mainstream. Now, the digital asset class has found relevancy in a new investment market: self-directed individual retirement accounts, or IRAs. And Los Angeles has quickly established itself as an epicenter of the crypto IRA industry.


Self-directed IRAs have long allowed investors to put their money into alternative assets such as gold, silver, platinum and palladium: minerals that are tangible, and stored securely by banks and financial institutions. But cryptocurrencies—which are essentially pieces of data that are authenticated and tracked on digital ledgers known as blockchains—are considerably different. Yet despite their decentralized, inherently riskier nature, that hasn’t stopped investors from pouring their retirement savings into crypto—giving rise to a cadre of new players seeking to manage such funds.

There are a handful of firms in the L.A. area focused on selling self-directed IRAs with a crypto focus, including Sherman Oaks-based Bitcoin IRA; Burbank-based BitIRA; Woodland Hills-based CoinIRA; and Beverly Hills-based Regal Assets, which is largely focused on metal commodities but sets up crypto IRAs for its wealthy client list.

Most notably, Long Beach-based iTrustCapital raised $125 million in Series A funding last month from New York-based Left Lane Capital. The raise gave iTrustCapital an eye-popping $1.3 billion unicorn valuation some four years after its launch, as well as the capital needed to continue its prolific growth.

With more than 150 employees and operations scattered across the South Bay and Irvine, as well as Salt Lake City, iTrustCapital could double in size by the end of 2022, company CEO Todd Southwick told dot.LA. It plans to use the new funding to build out its regulatory and compliance teams, pursue acquisitions and up its marketing budget.

iTrustCapital now holds roughly $2 billion in assets under custody and 27,000 client-funded accounts, with an average size of $55,000 per account. The startup said it has more than doubled its total transaction volume in the last six months alone, to more than $4.5 billion.

Todd Southwick

iTrustCapital CEO Todd Southwick.

Courtesy of iTrustCapital

Southwick maintains that iTrustCapital is profitable with revenues of less than $50 million in 2021, thanks in part to a pandemic that drove growth in the crypto market. A Series B raise could follow in 2022, though the timing has yet to be decided. “You’re either going to exit via acquisition or go public—I don’t have a preference,” he said.

iTrustCapital’s competitors include Nashville-based Alto Solutions, which is also a self-directed IRA platform and raised $40 million in a Series B round in January. “I think it’s a two-horse race right now [between Alto and iTrustCapital],” Alto founder and CEO Eric Satz said, discounting some of the smaller players active in crypto IRAs.

Like iTrustCapital, Alto also launched in 2018 and plans to use its new funding to grow its operations (Satz said it’s aiming to more than double its 50-person product and engineering team by the end of 2022). The firm currently serves more than 15,000 IRA investors and holds $1 billion of assets under custody.

Chris Kline

Bitcoin IRA co-founder and COO Chris Kline.

Sherman Oaks-based Bitcoin IRA, meanwhile, recently expanded its crypto offerings to focus on digital tokens with a market capitalization greater than $200 million—including Cardano (ADA) and Solana (SOL)—and to provide its clients with more options to hedge against market fluctuations, according to co-founder and COO Chris Kline.

“At the end of the day, the crypto industry is growing up,” Kline told dot.LA. “More and more clients are looking for options.” Bitcoin IRA’s strategy is to embrace “legitimate players” offering digital assets with larger market caps, Kline said, in order to avoid potential pitfalls in the market.

As an example, he pointed to the Securities and Exchange Commission’s December 2020 complaint against Ripple Labs and two of the crypto firm’s executives. The SEC alleged that Ripple raised more than $1.3 billion through an unregistered securities offering—the securities being Ripple’s XRP crypto token.

“You don’t want to be putting a coin in [an account] that could basically not be able to be sold at some point,” Kline said. “We’ve dealt with that—with things like what happened at Ripple at the end of 2020, and with the SEC basically making us tell our clients, ‘Hey, this asset may not be liquid again in the future. Beware.’ And a lot of them sold it off, some held it and they’re waiting to see what happens.”

As a result, not everyone is jumping on the crypto IRA bandwagon. Noticeably absent from the market are popular brokerages like Robinhood, E-Trade and TD Ameritrade—though Ameritrade has made overtures indicating that it could dip its toe in the crypto IRA market, according to sources interviewed.

“We are always monitoring and evaluating new products developing in the space, but we don’t have any specific plans to share at this time,” a TD Ameritrade spokesperson told dot.LA.

As more investors gravitate toward cryptocurrencies in search of financial gains, it makes sense that the sector continues to diversify its investment offerings. But for some who are responsible for clients’ savings, the notion of a crypto-focused retirement fund is simply too much risk to bear.

Financial planner Anjali Jariwala, who leads Torrance-based FIT Advisors, told dot.LA that she would be concerned with someone’s decision to use a self-directed IRA to invest in crypto.

“I believe in diversification and prefer IRA-type accounts to be invested in the markets,” she said. “If there is extra money that is in cash or sitting in a brokerage account, that may be used towards more speculative investments like Bitcoin—but I wouldn't try to find a way to invest retirement money.”

Subscribe to our newsletter to catch every headline.

Cadence

Lensa’s AI Art Is the Latest Trend, but Many Women Say the App Is Over Sexualizing Their Images. Here’s Why

Drew Grant

Drew Grant is dot.LA's Senior Editor. She's a media veteran with over 15-plus years covering entertainment and local journalism. During her tenure at The New York Observer, she founded one of their most popular verticals, tvDownload, and transitioned from generalist to Senior Editor of Entertainment and Culture, overseeing a freelance contributor network and ushering in the paper's redesign. More recently, she was Senior Editor of Special Projects at Collider, a writer for RottenTomatoes streaming series on Peacock and a consulting editor at RealClearLife, Ranker and GritDaily. You can find her across all social media platforms as @Videodrew and send tips to drew@dot.la.

Drew Grant in Lensa AI art
Drew Grant

It took me 48 hours to realize Lensa might have a problem.

“Is that my left arm or my boob?” I asked my boyfriend, which is not what I’d consider a GREAT question to have to ask when using photo editing software.

“Huh,” my boyfriend said. “Well, it has a nipple.”

Well then.

Read moreShow less

These Experts Believe the Music Industry is Primed for the Metaverse

Decerry Donato

Decerry Donato is a reporter at dot.LA. Prior to that, she was an editorial fellow at the company. Decerry received her bachelor's degree in literary journalism from the University of California, Irvine. She continues to write stories to inform the community about issues or events that take place in the L.A. area. On the weekends, she can be found hiking in the Angeles National forest or sifting through racks at your local thrift store.

concert with lots of people
Photo by Hume

In the past year, musicians including Megan Thee Stallion and Travis Scott have forged their way into metaverse-related businesses by hosting virtual reality (VR) concerts. It’s no surprise then that the metaverse, still in its early stages of development, has captured the attention of some of the largest investors over the past few years. And a handful of Los Angeles-based music companies invested in the metaverse are trying to capitalize on the moment. Two such companies are Hume, a web3 record label and music NFT project Blocktones, that creates unique tracks minted on the Ethereum blockchain. We spoke to them to find out if musicians along with the music industry will embrace the metaverse.

Read moreShow less

This Week in ‘Raises’: Drata Secures $200M, Dantari Lands $47M

Decerry Donato

Decerry Donato is a reporter at dot.LA. Prior to that, she was an editorial fellow at the company. Decerry received her bachelor's degree in literary journalism from the University of California, Irvine. She continues to write stories to inform the community about issues or events that take place in the L.A. area. On the weekends, she can be found hiking in the Angeles National forest or sifting through racks at your local thrift store.

This Week in ‘Raises’: Drata Secures $200M, Dantari Lands $47M
Modified by Joshua Letona

Security and compliance automation platform Drata received new funding to continue investing in research and development (R&D) to build its enterprise grade, automation solution. While biotechnology company Dantari will use its funds to continue developing targeted therapeutics for the treatment of cancers and other diseases.

***

Read moreShow less
RELATEDEDITOR'S PICKS
LA TECH JOBS
interchangeLA
Trending