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07/22/2025 - Updated on 07/23/2025
JPMorgan and BNY Mellon didn’t come to crypto to trade. They came for custody, the regulated layer that controls how institutional assets are stored, moved, and accessed.
As billions in institutional capital flows into digital assets, a small number of legacy banks are positioning themselves as the mandatory intermediaries between that capital and the blockchain. The system that was built to eliminate them may be handing them the keys.
Crypto didn’t start with institutions. It started with a rejection of them.
The core idea was simple: individuals hold their own assets, without relying on intermediaries.
But that model doesn’t scale easily to institutional capital.
Funds don’t manage private keys manually. Corporations don’t rely on hardware wallets. They need regulated, insured, compliant custody solutions.
That’s where firms like JPMorgan Chase and BNY Mellon enter the picture.
They’re not replacing crypto as they’re adapting it to fit existing financial structures.
And in doing so, they’re reclaiming the role crypto was designed to eliminate.
Trading gets attention. Custody controls access.
If you control custody, you control:
That makes custody the most strategic layer in the entire crypto stack.
It’s also the layer institutions understand best.
Banks have been safeguarding assets for centuries. Crypto doesn’t remove that expertise as it amplifies its importance.
As Bank for International Settlements has repeatedly noted in its digital asset research, custody remains a foundational requirement for institutional participation.
Without it, large-scale capital simply doesn’t enter the system.
Timing here isn’t random.
Three things have changed:
That combination creates an opening and banks are taking it.
They’re launching custody platforms, partnering with crypto firms, and positioning themselves as the trusted layer between traditional finance and blockchain systems.
Not because they believe in decentralization, but because they recognize where control sits.
And right now, control sits in custody.
The term “cartel” sounds aggressive, but the structure is straightforward.
A small number of large institutions are beginning to dominate crypto custody:
Over time, this creates concentration.
Instead of millions of users holding assets independently, large pools of crypto become managed by a handful of custodians.
It’s efficient. It’s compliant.
But it’s also a shift away from the original model of distributed control.
For institutions, this system makes sense.
For the broader ecosystem, it introduces a trade-off that isn’t always obvious:
Assets held in institutional custody are subject to:
In other words, they behave less like bearer assets and more like traditional financial holdings.
This doesn’t break crypto but it changes what crypto is.
ETFs get headlines because they affect price.
Custody affects structure.
An ETF brings capital into the market. Custody determines how that capital interacts with it.
If legacy banks control custody, they indirectly shape:
That’s a deeper level of influence than trading alone.
And it’s happening quietly, without the same level of scrutiny.
The custody cartel doesn’t mean crypto has failed.
It means it’s evolving in a direction that looks more familiar than expected.
Instead of eliminating intermediaries, the system is selecting new ones but better integrated, more technologically advanced, but still centralized in key areas.
This is what happens when an open system meets institutional capital.
It doesn’t stay open in the same way.
The rise of the custody cartel forces a difficult question:
Can crypto remain meaningfully decentralized if its largest participants rely on centralized custody?
There isn’t a clean answer yet.
But the trajectory is becoming clearer.
Control is not disappearing. It’s being reorganized.
And in that reorganization, legacy banks are finding their way back to the center this time, not as gatekeepers of money, but as gatekeepers of the keys that control it.
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