Northern Trust, the financial services company with assets totaling $10.7 trillion, is expanding into cryptocurrency hedge funds, report Forbes.

Sitting in the Fortune 500 list of largest U.S. companies, Northern Trust is opening doors to three “mainstream hedge funds” dealing in Bitcoin and Ethereum, according to their president, Pete Cherecwich. The three companies are unnamed at this time due to non-disclosure agreements.

Cherecwich told Forbes,” “You can take anything today. You can take movie rights, you can take all sorts of entities, and you can create a token for those,” said Cherecwich, who has been with the company for 11 years. “We have to be able to figure out how to hold those tokens, value those tokens, do those things.”

While Northern Trust won’t take direct cryptocurrency custody for at least another year, they’re currently focused on providing accounting services that compare the customer’s cryptocurrency in custody with the hedge fund reporting. Additionally, they help to estimate and record the value for the clients.

Many of Northern Trust’s services were built for cryptocurrency. As Forbes point out, they offer “new risk and control frameworks for anti-money-laundering, asset existence validation, crypto-trade reconciliations and the ability to handle new net asset value pricing arrangements.”

In addition to their involvement with cryptocurrency hedge funds, in February of 2017 they launched an alpha version blockchain-based private equity platform. This platform was built on the blockchain Hyperledger Fabric, with plans to fully integrate it into their $77 billion private equity business. The goal is to improve auditing processes by making transactions more visible and transparent.

Northern Trust Corporation is a financial services company organized in Delaware and headquartered in Chicago, Illinois that caters to corporations, institutional investors, and high net worth individuals. The company strives to give 1.5% of its pre-tax profits to charity annually, giving over $120 million to non-profits in the ten years preceding 2014.