Think about that. A crypto company, Kraken, now has the same banking access as JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Citigroup, and Wells Fargo. Kraken’s banking unit just won access to the Federal Reserve’s core payment systems, making it the first crypto firm able to move money on the same payment rail as thousands of banks.
Kraken’s direct access to Fedwire (the payment rail that moves trillions of dollars between banks every single day) means crypto can now tap directly into the Fed's core infrastructure. Crypto isn't fighting the system anymore, it's operating inside it.
While this doesn’t open the floodgates to other crypto firms overnight, it can certainly be perceived as signalling the beginning of that.
Davos 2026 was an assured sign of crypto’s evolved reputation. Discussions moved from theoretical possibilities to practical implementation, with a focus on tokenization and the creation of "institution-grade" infrastructure.
In previous years, digital assets were confined to neon‑lit “crypto houses” on the promenade. This year, crypto executives were invited to the main stage , an unspoken sign from the financial heads-of-state that digital assets were to be taken seriously.
Conversations centered around how to integrate digital assets into the financial system safely and productively. While that might sound unglamorous, that’s exactly the point. The world’s biggest players are no longer debating whether to pay attention to digital assets – they’re asking a different question entirely: “What happens if we don’t get this right?”
Policymakers are pushing for crypto clarity. Despite skepticism that The Clarity Act has stalled in the Senate, most industry leaders know that regulation in this space – while messy and complicated – is imminent.
Treasury Secretary, Scott Bessent, is on record saying that getting it “across the line” in the current legislative window is essential. It’s a clear signal that the debate has moved from whether or not to regulate, to how best to do it.
With digital assets becoming an integral part of the U.S. financial system, the concern among regulators is ensuring that the right protocols are in place to facilitate secure growth, healthy competition, and long‑term resilience.
Always keep an eye on where the world chooses to trust their ‘nest egg.’ Main Street and Wall Street agree, in terms of crypto, that integration into wealth and retirement channels is the future. Already available in self-directed IRAs, much of the industry is now looking to 401K digital asset diversification.
Several major financial firms have recently, albeit quietly, expanded portfolio access to alternative assets. For example, Morgan Stanley told its financial advisors in October 2025 that the firm would widen access to crypto investments across its client base.
Taken together, these four signals undeniably demonstrate crypto’s real momentum toward financial infrastructure integration. Digital assets are not just being traded on specialist platforms; they are powering many of the same systems that power the entire financial ecosystem.
What matters now is how the technology side of the industry responds. If crypto is to function as financial infrastructure, technology leaders need to champion and adopt a best-in-class regulatory framework, before something subpar is imposed on them.
Crypto as a financial experiment is over. Integration and framework are the new watchwords and it's imperative that fintech leaders consider digital assets within their brands in order to remain relevant and competitive in this new era.