JPMorgan Chase is considering offering cryptocurrency trading services to institutional clients, according to sources familiar with the matter. The largest U.S. bank is evaluating products that would include spot and derivatives trading as part of efforts to expand its presence in digital assets.
The plans remain in early stages and will depend on client demand for specific products. The bank’s markets division is assessing what crypto offerings could be made available to institutional customers. JPMorgan declined to comment on the report, which Bloomberg first published.
The move would mark a major shift for the bank despite CEO Jamie Dimon’s long-standing criticism of Bitcoin. Dimon has previously compared Bitcoin to “pet rocks” and called it a “hyped-up fraud.” In May, Dimon told investors JPMorgan would allow clients to buy Bitcoin while stating the bank would not custody the asset.
JPMorgan has been active in blockchain infrastructure even as its CEO maintains skepticism. Earlier this month, the bank arranged a short-term bond for Galaxy Digital on the Solana blockchain. The transaction demonstrated JPMorgan’s expanding capabilities in tokenized assets.
The bank also launched its first tokenized money-market fund in December. The MONY fund launched on Ethereum with $100 million in initial capital through JPMorgan’s Kinexys Digital Assets platform. The fund is available to qualified investors with at least $5 million in investable assets and accepts subscriptions in cash or USDC stablecoin.
JPMorgan’s potential crypto trading launch would follow similar moves by other major financial institutions. Morgan Stanley announced it will offer crypto trading on its E*Trade platform starting in the first half of 2026 through a partnership with Zerohash. The firm manages trillions in client assets.
Charles Schwab CEO Rick Wurster announced the $11.6 trillion firm will begin offering Bitcoin trading in the first half of 2026. Wurster noted that 20% of Schwab clients already own cryptocurrency. He said clients have been requesting the ability to hold crypto assets at Schwab alongside their other investments.
PNC Bank recently partnered with Coinbase to roll out Bitcoin trading for its clients. The moves reflect growing institutional demand as regulatory frameworks become clearer. President Donald Trump has pledged to make America the “crypto capital of the world.”
Bitcoin faces challenging market conditions as it trades below key recovery levels. The cryptocurrency continues struggling to overcome resistance around $93,000 while defending support at $85,000. U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF holdings have declined less than 5% despite a more than 30% drawdown from October highs.
Ray Youssef, CEO of crypto app NoOnes, noted that Bitcoin has failed to deliver on its hedge narrative in 2025. The asset has shown heightened sensitivity to macroeconomic factors rather than trading like digital gold. Youssef said Bitcoin’s upside is now tied to liquidity expansion and policy clarity.
The global crypto market is valued at around $3.1 trillion, with Bitcoin accounting for approximately $1.8 trillion. JPMorgan analysts projected last month that Bitcoin could climb to $170,000 within six to twelve months as perpetual futures deleveraging completes.
JPMorgan’s concrete plans to offer crypto trading will depend on whether the bank sees sufficient demand for specific products. The bank will also assess risks, opportunities, and regulatory feasibility before moving forward with any offerings.
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