Wall Street’s crypto push has been years in the making says Morgan Stanley
Morgan Stanley’s Amy Oldenburg says banks are expanding into crypto not because of hype, but after years of infrastructure development.
By Helene Braun|Edited by Stephen Alpher Mar 24, 2026, 4:10 p.m.
Make us preferred on Google
What to know:
- Morgan Stanley executive Amy Oldenburg said Wall Street’s move into crypto reflects years of behind-the-scenes work on modernizing financial infrastructure, not a sudden bout of FOMO.
- The bank is expanding its digital asset strategy across trading, asset management and infrastructure, including plans to support tokenized equities on its alternative trading system in the second half of 2026.
- Oldenburg said upgrading decades-old banking systems and coordinating across the global financial network remain major hurdles, even as interest in tools like stablecoins grows and institutional crypto activity quietly builds.
New York — Morgan Stanley’s head of digital asset strategy Amy Oldenburg pushed back on the idea that Wall Street is only now embracing crypto out of fear of missing out, arguing instead that large banks are acting on years of internal work.
“TradFi is getting FOMO and is now getting involved… it really isn’t accurate,” Oldenburg said during a panel at the Digital Asset Summit in New York on Tuesday. “We’ve been on a journey around the entire modernization of financial infrastructure for years.”
Her comments come as major U.S. banks, long seen as cautious or late to crypto, begin to expand beyond limited offerings. For years, firms like Morgan Stanley restricted activity to indirect exposure, such as offering wealthy clients access to bitcoin BTC$69,890.04 funds and, more recently, spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) on its E*Trade platform. It even recently filed to launch its own spot bitcoin ETF. Broader participation was slowed by regulatory uncertainty and concerns around custody, compliance and market structure.
That stance has started to shift. Morgan Stanley has recently outlined a more defined digital asset strategy, with efforts spanning trading, asset management and infrastructure.
Oldenburg said the bank is now preparing to support tokenized equities trading on its alternative trading system. “One of the things that we are planning for the second half of 2026 is turning on our trajectory cross… to support tokenized equities later this year,” she said. The platform already handles equities, ETFs and American Depositary Receipts, which she described as a natural base for expansion.
Inside the firm, the transition requires reworking core systems. “We are having to re-teach ourselves what legacy infrastructure, pipes and plumbing look like,” Oldenburg said, pointing to the challenge of upgrading decades-old financial architecture to support faster settlement and continuous trading.
She also highlighted a gap between crypto startups and large institutions. “There’s so many other connectivity points that we need to plug in around it,” she said, noting that founders often underestimate how complex bank systems are.
Even so, areas like stablecoins are gaining traction as a way to move money faster and at lower cost than traditional rails.
Adoption, however, depends on coordination across the financial system. “We can’t just modernize on our own,” Oldenburg said. “This is an incredibly complex, integrated global network.”
Despite weak token prices, she said activity continues to build. “It really is very early innings,” Oldenburg said, signaling that Wall Street’s deeper integration with crypto may be gradual but underway.
More For You
Crypto finance is beginning to look at lot more traditional, Aave and Ethena founders say
By Margaux Nijkerk|Edited by Sheldon Reback11 minutes ago
Until recently, crypto users mostly traded tokens or borrowed against them, often chasing high, but unpredictable yields. New tools allow them to lock in returns, even in a market known for big swings.
What to know:
- Crypto is evolving beyond trading into more stable, predictable return products, similar to bonds, as new tools let users lock in or manage yield despite market volatility, said the heads of Aave and Ethena.
- While DeFi yields still rely heavily on trading activity and leverage, Stani Kulechov and Guy Young said returns will increasingly come from traditional finance assets moving onchain.

Circle stock plunges 18% as a new draft of the Clarity Act threatens stablecoin rewards
7 minutes ago
Crypto finance is beginning to look at lot more traditional, Aave and Ethena founders say
11 minutes ago
Why cautious TradFi firms love staked ether
21 minutes ago
Bitcoin slips below $70,000, Circle's 16% slide leads crypto stock sell-off
46 minutes ago
CoinDesk 20 performance update: Polkadot (DOT) drops 2.3% as index trades lower
2 hours ago
Tether hires a 'Big Four' firm for a full audit of USDT reserves
2 hours agoTop Stories
Stablecoin yield in crypto Clarity Act won't allow rewards on balances, latest text says
17 hours ago
New York Stock Exchange taps Securitize to build its tokenized stock platform
3 hours ago
Bitcoin may have already bottomed out near $60,000. Here’s why.
2 hours ago
Bitcoin finds stability at 2023 investor cost basis, echoing past cycle
4 hours ago
Wall Street broker Bernstein calls bitcoin bottom, keeps $150,000 year-end target
3 hours ago
Here’s how Treasuries could shape Trump’s Iran war and bitcoin moves
8 hours agoIn this article
BTCBTC$69.890,04◢0,94%