Subscribe

JPMorgan preparing to offer Bitcoin fund to wealthy clients

offer

The actively managed fund is expected to be available as soon as this summer, and NYDIG will be the custody provider.

JPMorgan Chase & Co. is preparing to offer a Bitcoin fund to wealthy clients, the latest sign that Wall Street is warming to the largest cryptocurrency after it soared in recent months.

The actively managed fund will be available as soon as this summer, CoinDesk reported Monday, citing sources familiar with the plans. NYDIG will be the custody provider, a person with knowledge of the situation said, asking not to be identified because the decision hasn’t been made public.

Spokespeople for JPMorgan and NYDIG declined to comment.

Bitcoin rose as much as 12% Monday morning to trade at almost $54,000, the biggest intraday gain since early February.

Wall Street banks are grappling with whether to offer clients exposure to cyptocurrencies after staying mostly on the sidelines as Bitcoin and other tokens surged in popularity. JPMorgan has been taking some of the biggest strides, adding Bitcoin exchanges Coinbase Inc. and Gemini Trust Co. as banking clients last year. The firm also turned to crypto to help speed up corporate payments, launching JPM Coin in 2019.

JPMorgan co-President Daniel Pinto said last week that the firm will “accompany the clients” when it comes to Bitcoin. The biggest U.S. bank joins Morgan Stanley in planning to offer rich clients access to funds that enable ownership of Bitcoin.

Waiting for the Bitcoin ETFs

Related Topics:

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Equities rally continues ahead of Fed speeches

The data suggests cuts but what will Fed officials signal?

UBS mulls bonuses for wealth management referrals

Fees would be paid for bankers introducing wealthy clients.

Bill Ackman confronted at Milken over DEI views

Hedge fund veteran faced his critics at premier business event.

JPMorgan, Citi weigh potential from EU bonds change

The bloc’s debt could be added to MSCI sovereign bond indexes.

SEC probing Boeing’s safety claims following Alaska Airlines incident

The federal regulator is examining statements from the company after a failure in one of its planes led to a near-tragedy in January.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print