Wall Street hasn’t always been friendly toward crypto. For years, big lenders treated it like a passing fad or a risky playground for retail traders. But that attitude is shifting fast. JPMorgan’s plan to let clients trade digital assets marks a turning point — a signal that the most traditional corners of finance are finally warming up to crypto. What was once dismissed as speculation is now being folded into mainstream banking strategy.
The bank has moved quietly but clearly. It ran a pilot of a deposit token called JPMD on Coinbase’s Base blockchain in June, a step that aims to make bank deposits usable on public chains for institutional clients.
Executives say risk rules and regulatory checks will shape how far the bank goes. Lucas said the firm is looking at what “the right custodians” would look like rather than taking custody itself for now.
That suggests JPMorgan would rely on third parties if and when it offers custody services, keeping its balance sheet and compliance teams at arm’s length from the security and legal complexities of holding private keys.
That would mark a notable shift for a bank whose CEO long warned about crypto risks but has recently allowed client access to Bitcoin trading in statements to investors.
For customers and market watchers, the key questions remain: which clients will get access first, which coins will be tradable, and who will custody assets if custody is outsourced.
The bank’s statements point to a careful, staged approach — trading first, custody later — and regulators in the US will likely follow closely.
Expect more detail from JPMorgan as pilot programs like JPMD and partnerships with exchanges produce results and as the bank outlines compliance safeguards.
Featured image from Unsplash, chart from TradingView