Why Morgan Stanley's CFO sees tokenization as the next big step for its multi-trillion wealth business
Morgan Stanley CFO Sharon Yeshaya says the bank is eyeing a "tokenized world" where blockchain technology allows client assets and liabilities to move more efficiently across its wealth management platform.
By Helene Braun|Edited by Aoyon AshrafUpdated Apr 15, 2026, 3:30 p.m. Published Apr 15, 2026, 3:17 p.m. Make preferred on
What to know:
- Morgan Stanley is positioning tokenization and onchain finance as the next phase for its wealth management business, aiming to move assets and liabilities more fluidly over digital rails.
- The bank's chief financial officer emphasized that blockchain-based infrastructure will be integrated into core services such as client advisory, lending and cash management, rather than treated as a standalone crypto effort.
- The bank recently advanced this strategy through a digital asset pilot with Zero Hash and has expanded leadership under a new head of digital assets, as well as new bitcoin offerings, including its own spot ETF, even as digital assets remain a small part of its business today.
Morgan Stanley is signaling a growing focus on tokenization and blockchain-based infrastructure, framing “onchain” finance as a potential next step in how it serves wealth clients.
Speaking during the bank’s first-quarter earnings call, executives described a future where assets and liabilities move more freely across digital rails. “How do you think of a tokenized world? How do you think of an onchain world where you can move assets quickly, the same way you’d be able to move those liabilities quickly?” Sharon Yeshaya, the firm’s chief financial officer, said, pointing to a shift beyond traditional account-based systems.
The comments carry added weight given the scale of Morgan Stanley’s wealth business, which oversees trillions in client assets and serves as a central engine of the firm’s growth. Any change to how assets are moved, lent or advised on within that system could have wide-reaching implications across the financial industry.
The comments place tokenization within the bank’s core wealth strategy, not as a standalone crypto initiative. Executives tied the concept to client advisory, lending and cash management, suggesting that digital infrastructure could reshape how portfolios are managed and how clients access liquidity.
“We would be there to offer different types of products on the asset side,” Yeshaya said, adding that the firm is also considering “what kinds of things might exist on the lending side for onchain… and how do you also move and think about all of those digital assets.”
The framing reflects a broader industry shift, in which large banks are increasingly exploring blockchain technology to modernize financial plumbing rather than disrupt it outright.
At Morgan Stanley, that approach remains measured but is quickly progressing.
The firm recently launched a digital asset pilot through a partnership with Zero Hash, allowing select E*Trade clients to buy and sell major cryptocurrencies. While limited in scope, the initiative gives the bank a controlled entry point into digital assets as it evaluates client demand.
Morgan Stanley has also expanded its leadership in the space, appointing Amy Oldenburg as head of digital assets earlier this year. The firm has taken steps to offer bitcoin exposure through its own spot bitcoin ETF, MSBT, which is trading 8% higher since its launch a week ago.
Still, digital assets remain a small part of the business. Instead, the emphasis appears to be on long-term infrastructure. “There’s a lot of creative space in terms of the advice-driven model,” Yeshaya said.
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