“The Wall Street giant’s move — should it come to pass — would further legitimize crypto and increase distribution channels, said ClearStreet’s Owan Lau.”, — write: www.coindesk.com
According to analysts, the Wall Street giant’s entrance may benefit existing players like Coinbase (COIN), Bullish (BLSH), and Galaxy Digital (GLXY) even as it signals stiffer competition ahead.
“If JPMorgan offers crypto trading to institutional clients, it will be a big positive for the space,” said Owen Lau, analyst at ClearStreet. “It will further legitimize crypto and increase distribution channels,” he continued. “The domino effect will likely cascade down to other banks. Coinbase and Bullish are well positioned to benefit from aggregating and matching institutional orders from this large distribution channel.”
“JPMorgan is a broker, they potentially use exchanges to match the orders,” Lau continued. That opens the door for platforms like Coinbase Prime and Bullish — which already offer institutional-grade crypto execution — to play a key role in settling those trades.
Read more: JPMorgan weighs crypto trading for institutions amid growing demand
Still, the move adds new pressure for incumbents. In a note last week, Compass Point’s Ed Engel wrote that while Wall Street’s growing involvement in crypto “broadens the addressable market for digital assets,” it also intensifies competition.
“Companies like GLXY and BLSH benefit from higher institutional participation while COIN and Circle Financial (CRCL) face risks of margin pressure,” Engel wrote..
As institutional crypto activity picks up, Engel said trading volumes in both spot and derivatives markets are likely to rise, along with demand for lending and custody services — areas where crypto-native firms have already built infrastructure. However, lower-touch services such as basic spot trading may face downward pressure on fees.
“We believe GLXY is a leading beneficiary of Wall Street’s crypto adoption given its focus on principal trading, derivatives and high touch prime brokerage services,” Engel wrote. “BLSH can also benefit from Wall Street’s adoption given that it already offers some of the lowest spot fee rates globally.”
To sum up the analyst takes, the potential entry of JPMorgan could draw more traditional institutions into the crypto market. But instead of displacing existing platforms, it may push them deeper into the plumbing of institutional finance — matching trades, providing custody, and offering risk management tools.
In practice, that could look like a pension fund routing a crypto trade through a traditional Wall Street bank, only to have it executed on Coinbase Prime or Bullish. The more demand JPMorgan and any major lender that follows funnels into the system, the more liquidity those platforms can capture.
To this point, JPMorgan has not confirmed the launch of crypto trading for institutional clients, but the move seems more likely than not as the bank has gradually warmed to the sector, including launching its own stablecoin and exploring blockchain settlement tools.
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VanEck’s David Schassler expects gold and bitcoin to rebound sharply as investor demand for hard assets is expected to rise.
- Bitcoin has underperformed compared to gold and the Nasdaq 100 this year, but a VanEck manager predicts a strong comeback in 2026.
- David Schassler, the firm’s head of multi-asset solutions, expects gold’s surge to continue to $5,000 next year as fiscal “debasement” accelerates.
- Bitcoin will likely follow gold’s breakout, driven by returning liquidity and long-term demand for scarce assets.
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