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07/22/2025 - Updated on 07/23/2025
BNY, the world’s largest custodian bank with nearly $59 trillion in assets under custody, expanded its digital asset operations into Abu Dhabi this week through partnerships with Finstreet and ADI Foundation a move that signals how Wall Street is increasingly building crypto infrastructure in the Gulf rather than at home.
A growing number of institutions involved in Wall Street crypto custody are moving operations and partnerships into the Middle East, especially the United Arab Emirates. The trend reflects a broader shift in global finance as banks search for jurisdictions offering regulatory clarity and long-term support for blockchain infrastructure.
This week, BNY expanded its digital asset custody operations into Abu Dhabi through partnerships with Finstreet and ADI Foundation. Operating under the framework of the Abu Dhabi Global Market, the project will initially provide custody services for Bitcoin and Ethereum before expanding into tokenized assets and stablecoins.
The move carries enormous weight. BNY oversees nearly $59 trillion in assets under custody and administration. When the world’s largest custodian bank builds crypto infrastructure in the Gulf instead of New York, it signals a major shift in how institutions view the future of finance.
The rise of Wall Street crypto custody in Abu Dhabi is becoming less about experimentation and more about strategic positioning.
A key reason behind the expansion of Wall Street crypto custody in the Middle East is frustration with Western regulation.
For years, U.S. crypto firms and banks faced inconsistent oversight, enforcement-driven policy decisions, and unclear accounting rules. Even after spot Bitcoin ETFs gained approval, many institutions still viewed custody as one of the industry’s biggest operational risks.
Banks wanted exposure to tokenization, stablecoin settlement, and digital asset services, but many hesitated because of political uncertainty.
The UAE provided a different approach.
Regulators in Abu Dhabi and Dubai spent years building legal frameworks specifically designed for exchanges, custodians, and blockchain infrastructure providers. The Abu Dhabi Global Market operates under a common-law system familiar to global finance firms, making it attractive for international institutions.
For banks, the appeal is not about escaping oversight. It is about operating under predictable rules.
That stability is becoming a major driver behind the growth of Wall Street crypto custody across the Gulf region.
Larry Fink, CEO of BlackRock, previously described tokenization as the “next generation for markets,” reflecting growing institutional confidence in blockchain-based financial systems.
Another major factor behind the expansion of Wall Street crypto custody is sovereign capital.
Middle Eastern governments are no longer simply investing in crypto startups. They are funding the infrastructure layer itself.
Earlier this year, Abu Dhabi-backed investment firm MGX reportedly invested $2 billion into Binance, one of the largest institutional crypto deals tied to the region.
At the same time, UAE-linked entities continue supporting blockchain infrastructure, stablecoin systems, tokenization projects, and regulated custody platforms.
This matters because custody sits at the center of institutional crypto markets. It provides the foundation for ETFs, tokenized securities, and future on-chain financial systems.
As a result, Wall Street crypto custody is increasingly tied to sovereign financial strategy rather than speculative trading.
Unlike venture capital firms chasing short-term trends, sovereign wealth funds typically invest with long-term goals. That patient approach aligns closely with how large banks think about financial infrastructure.
There is an important distinction emerging inside the UAE itself.
Dubai has become the flashy public face of crypto — attracting exchanges, influencers, startups, and consumer-facing Web3 companies. Abu Dhabi, meanwhile, is becoming the institutional fortress.
That split appears intentional.
While Dubai focuses on broad ecosystem growth, Abu Dhabi is concentrating on custody, regulated finance, tokenization, and institutional-grade infrastructure.
For Wall Street firms, Abu Dhabi increasingly looks less like a crypto experiment and more like a future financial operating system.
That explains why custody businesses, derivatives platforms, and tokenization firms are clustering there.
The migration is not ideological. It is operational.
The most revealing part of Wall Street’s Middle East pivot is what it says about confidence in Western financial leadership.
Banks are effectively signaling that the next phase of digital finance may develop faster outside the traditional Western regulatory core.
That would have sounded absurd five years ago.
Today, it feels increasingly obvious.
The future of finance may still trade in dollars, but the infrastructure supporting it could increasingly sit in Abu Dhabi server rooms, Gulf regulatory zones, and sovereign-backed blockchain networks.
Crypto custody is becoming geopolitical.
And Wall Street has already started moving.