
Solana privacy protocol Umbra has partnered with Streamflow to launch confidential vesting for the $97 billion token unlock market.
Summary
- Umbra and Streamflow launched confidential vesting that encrypts token unlock schedules, vesting amounts, and recipient addresses on Solana, preventing public front-running of insider allocations.
- The integration targets the $97 billion crypto token unlock market, where standard vesting contracts create publicly visible supply signals that traders use to position ahead of scheduled releases.
- Umbra is built on Arcium’s encrypted execution engine and raised $154.9 million in USDC commitments from over 10,000 participants via MetaDAO’s ICO framework in October 2025.
Umbra, the Solana-native financial privacy layer built on Arcium’s encrypted execution engine, has launched confidential vesting in partnership with Streamflow, the leading token distribution platform listed in Solana’s official documentation.
The integration encrypts vesting schedules, allocation amounts, and recipient wallet addresses so that on-chain observers cannot access the underlying parameters of token unlock agreements.
The problem the product targets is structural. Standard vesting contracts execute on a public ledger where anyone can see which wallets will receive tokens, the exact amounts, and when each tranche unlocks. Sophisticated traders build sell positions ahead of supply increases from team and investor allocations, creating structural selling pressure that directly disadvantages the projects and token holders they front-run.
What confidential vesting does and why it matters at institutional scale
Umbra’s infrastructure processes vesting operations over fully encrypted data using Arcium’s multi-party computation framework. The recipient’s identity, allocation size, and unlock schedule are all encrypted at the contract level, with actual token transfers settling on Solana without exposing the underlying parameters to the public mempool or to on-chain analytics tools.
Streamflow is integrated directly into the Solana ecosystem as the standard token vesting infrastructure and has processed contracts for hundreds of Solana-native projects.
The partnership connects Umbra’s privacy layer to that existing tooling without requiring a separate workflow, making confidential vesting available as a straightforward option within the same interface that teams and investors already use.
“Umbra is the initial proof of what becomes possible when you build financial infrastructure powered by encrypted compute,” said Yannik Schrade, CEO of Arcium, at the March 2026 public wallet launch that preceded today’s vesting integration.
The $97 billion figure represents the estimated total value of scheduled crypto token unlocks across major ecosystems through 2027. Solana accounts for a significant portion of this market given the concentration of recently launched protocols on the chain with multi-year vesting schedules still outstanding.
Why Solana’s privacy infrastructure has accelerated in 2026
Umbra raised $154.9 million in USDC commitments from more than 10,518 participants via MetaDAO’s ICO in October 2025. Arcium’s Mainnet Alpha launched in February 2026, Umbra opened its public privacy wallet in March, and confidential vesting marks the protocol’s first institutional product beyond individual transaction privacy.
Crypto.news has covered the growing institutional interest in privacy-preserving blockchain infrastructure as quantum computing concerns accelerate revaluation of cryptographic foundations.
Crypto.news has also tracked how privacy protocol capital rotation has driven ZEC to a 73% monthly gain as encrypted execution infrastructure gains institutional attention.
The confidential vesting launch extends Umbra’s privacy infrastructure from individual transactions into the corporate treasury and investor management workflows where the largest on-chain unlock volumes are concentrated.
Crypto.news has also noted how security and compliance standards now determine institutional capital access, a constraint that shapes how confidential vesting products must integrate KYC and audit capabilities alongside privacy protections.





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