Traditional financial institutions are becoming increasingly active in crypto. Asset managers are launching Bitcoin ETFs, banks are building blockchain-based settlement systems, and payment companies are integrating stablecoins into their networks.
This shift is being driven by strong investor demand, growing Bitcoin ETF adoption, clearer regulations, and new revenue opportunities. Since January 2024, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs have attracted more than $53 billion in net inflows, while global crypto ownership has reached approximately 741 million users.
Companies that once kept their distance from crypto are now expanding their digital asset operations. BlackRock manages the largest spot Bitcoin ETF, JPMorgan has processed over $1.5 trillion in tokenized transactions through its blockchain platforms, PayPal has launched its own stablecoin, and Visa and Mastercard are building payment infrastructure that supports digital assets.
The growing involvement of these firms shows that crypto is becoming part of the broader financial system rather than operating outside of it.
Traditional Finance, often referred to as TradFi, is the conventional financial system built around banks, stock exchanges, insurance companies, payment providers, and asset managers. These institutions act as intermediaries, helping individuals and businesses save, invest, borrow, and transfer money.
Whether someone deposits money in a bank, purchases stocks through a brokerage account, or sends funds through a payment processor, they are interacting with traditional finance. Unlike decentralized financial systems, TradFi operates under strict regulatory oversight designed to protect consumers and maintain market stability.
One of the biggest reasons traditional financial institutions are entering crypto is customer demand.
Global crypto ownership has expanded rapidly over the last several years. Today, approximately 741 million people worldwide own digital assets, representing roughly 9.1% of the global population.
Bitcoin remains the dominant digital asset, with an estimated 480 million to 500 million holders globally. Meanwhile, approximately 106 million users hold Bitcoin directly through on-chain wallets, while between 30 million and 60 million users actively transact with cryptocurrencies each month.
Institutional investors are also becoming increasingly interested in digital assets. Many now view Bitcoin as a long-term store of value, inflation hedge, and portfolio diversification tool.
This growing demand has encouraged major asset managers to expand their crypto offerings.
Major Asset Managers Increasing Crypto Exposure
Traditional financial giants are no longer watching from the sidelines.
BlackRock
BlackRock has become the dominant player in crypto ETFs through its iShares product lineup and tokenization initiatives.
Fidelity Investments
Fidelity offers spot crypto funds, digital asset custody services, and private wealth crypto allocation programs for institutional clients.
Morgan Stanley
Morgan Stanley has integrated approved crypto investment products into its wealth management business, allowing financial advisors to provide exposure to qualified clients.
Franklin Templeton
Franklin Templeton continues expanding its digital asset business through lower-fee crypto products and acquisitions of crypto-focused firms.
Grayscale Investments
Grayscale remains one of the largest crypto asset managers, operating numerous public crypto trusts and diversified investment vehicles.
Bitwise Asset Management
Bitwise specializes in crypto index products and altcoin-focused ETFs, helping institutional investors access emerging blockchain ecosystems.
Pantera Capital
Pantera Capital remains one of the most influential crypto investment firms, focusing on venture capital, token funds, and blockchain infrastructure.
Galaxy Digital
Galaxy Digital bridges traditional finance and crypto through investment banking, asset management, mining operations, and ETF partnerships.
Polychain Capital
Polychain focuses on early-stage blockchain infrastructure and decentralized network investments.
The participation of these firms demonstrates that institutional crypto adoption is no longer an isolated trend but a structural shift within global finance.
Bitcoin ETFs Have Changed Everything
The approval of spot Bitcoin ETFs created one of the most significant turning points in crypto’s history.
Since regulatory approval in January 2024, spot Bitcoin ETFs have accumulated more than $58.7 billion in lifetime net inflows and approximately $102 billion in assets under management.
Between January 2024 and June 2026 alone, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs attracted approximately $53.49 billion in cumulative net inflows.
This represents one of the fastest integrations of a new asset class into traditional financial markets.
Institutions overwhelmingly prefer ETFs over direct crypto ownership for several reasons:
By packaging Bitcoin into a familiar investment structure, ETFs have significantly lowered the barriers to institutional participation.
Beyond customer demand, crypto is creating entirely new business opportunities for traditional financial institutions.
Crypto trading platforms generate transaction fees. Custody services create recurring revenue streams through secure asset storage. Asset managers collect management fees from Bitcoin ETFs and other crypto investment products.
Meanwhile, tokenized assets, blockchain-based settlement systems, stablecoin infrastructure, and digital payment networks are opening additional revenue channels.
For many institutions, crypto is evolving from an investment opportunity into a long-term business strategy.
Regulatory uncertainty was once one of the biggest obstacles preventing institutions from entering crypto.
Today, that environment is changing.
Governments and regulators worldwide are developing clearer frameworks governing crypto assets, stablecoins, exchanges, and custody providers.
Initiatives such as the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation and the approval of spot Bitcoin ETFs have increased institutional confidence.
As legal uncertainty decreases and compliance standards improve, traditional financial institutions are becoming increasingly comfortable expanding their crypto operations.
Perhaps no company better illustrates the shift than BlackRock.
Years ago, CEO Larry Fink publicly criticized Bitcoin, referring to it as a tool for money laundering and criminal activity.
However, growing client demand forced the firm to reconsider.
In January 2024, BlackRock launched the iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT), which has since grown into the world’s largest Bitcoin ETF with approximately $66.5 billion in assets under management.
The company later expanded into Ethereum ETFs, blockchain-focused investment products, and tokenization initiatives.
BlackRock now views Bitcoin as a legitimate alternative asset class and a potential hedge against inflation, sovereign debt expansion, and currency devaluation.
Charles Schwab’s crypto journey began cautiously in 2018 when it enabled Bitcoin futures trading through approved futures accounts.
Since then, Schwab has steadily expanded its digital asset offerings.
Today, its crypto ecosystem includes:
The firm’s growing interest in prediction markets signals its belief that event-based financial products could become a meaningful segment of future capital markets.
While CEO Jamie Dimon remains skeptical of speculative cryptocurrencies, JPMorgan has become one of the largest institutional blockchain innovators.
The bank’s digital asset ecosystem includes:
A blockchain-based payment system supporting 24/7 wholesale settlement and cross-border transfers.
A tokenization platform supporting:
JPMorgan has successfully tokenized:
The bank has processed more than $1.5 trillion in on-chain transaction volume, demonstrating how blockchain technology can be integrated into traditional financial infrastructure.
PayPal has become one of the largest fintech gateways into crypto.
Users can buy, sell, hold, and transfer cryptocurrencies directly through the platform with as little as $1.
The company has also launched PayPal USD (PYUSD), a dollar-backed stablecoin issued in partnership with Paxos.
Backed by cash equivalents, Treasury securities, and U.S. dollar reserves, PYUSD represents PayPal’s effort to bridge traditional payments and blockchain networks.
Visa and Mastercard are integrating blockchain technology directly into their payment infrastructure.
Both companies now support stablecoin settlement systems, blockchain-based payment rails, developer APIs, and crypto partnerships.
Instead of simply offering crypto rewards cards, they are embedding digital asset networks into merchant payment systems and global settlement infrastructure.
These efforts position blockchain as a potential foundation for the next generation of payments.
The integration of traditional finance and crypto is still in its early stages. Several trends suggest even deeper adoption in the coming years:
More Banks Entering Crypto
Banks are expected to expand crypto trading, custody, lending, and settlement services as regulations mature.
Stocks, bonds, real estate, and other assets may increasingly move onto blockchain networks, enabling faster settlement and fractional ownership.
Stablecoins are evolving into tools for payments, treasury management, and cross-border settlements.
Prediction markets are attracting growing interest from both crypto-native platforms and traditional financial firms.
Artificial intelligence is expected to improve fraud detection, compliance, investment management, and automated financial services.
The relationship between traditional finance and crypto has fundamentally changed.
What began as skepticism has evolved into active participation. Asset managers are launching crypto ETFs, banks are tokenizing financial assets, payment companies are integrating stablecoins, and institutional investors are allocating capital to digital assets.
The question is no longer whether traditional finance will enter crypto.
It already has.
The more important question is how deeply blockchain technology, digital assets, and decentralized infrastructure will become embedded within the future global financial system.
How Traditional Finance Giants Are Quietly Entering Crypto was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

