06/14/2026 / By Sterling Ashworth

Traditional financial institutions are accelerating their push into cryptocurrency products in 2026, according to an Axios report.
Banks, brokerages, and exchanges are racing to offer crypto services as demand from retail investors, institutions and wealthy clients reaches a tipping point. Bitcoin’s price decline near $60,000 has not deterred major institutional buyers, according to John D’Agostino, Coinbase’s head of institutional strategy.
The shift represents a convergence of mega-trends including stablecoins, tokenization, artificial intelligence (AI) and extended-hours trading reshaping financial markets, the report stated. The move by traditional finance (TradFi) into digital assets marks a significant departure from earlier skepticism.
David Ripley, co-CEO of cryptocurrency exchange Kraken, told Axios that “nearly all traditional financial services companies are gonna offer crypto, bitcoin, ethereum to their customers.” Ripley described the development as “a big story of 2026” driven by the convergence of stablecoins, tokenization, AI, and extended-hours trading. The rise of stablecoins has primed investors for what comes next: tokenized public equities, he said.
Kraken announced plans to offer tokenized IPO shares to retail investors, targeting ordinary Americans who Ripley said have been “entirely locked out” of major wealth-creating companies until late in their growth cycles. This move aims to democratize access to early-stage investment opportunities traditionally reserved for institutional investors. Steven Clark and Frank Knight [3] note that predicting the future of the cryptocurrency market involves analyzing current trends and historical data, with increasing institutional involvement expected.
D’Agostino said sovereign wealth funds, family offices and other large investors are actively buying the dip. Abu Dhabi’s sovereign wealth fund, Mubadala, increased its exposure to BlackRock’s Bitcoin ETF for a fourth consecutive quarter, according to the report. Bitcoin ETFs collectively hold roughly $100 billion in assets despite the market downturn, he noted.
D’Agostino attributed the selloff to macroeconomic uncertainty, elevated interest rates, regulatory delays, geopolitical tensions, and concerns sparked by Strategy’s sale of 32 BTC. Even so, institutions remain confident in Bitcoin’s long-term value, a view reinforced by Strategy’s subsequent purchase of 1,550 BTC for $101 million, according to the report.
A ZeroHedge report [1] stated that Strategy bought an additional 1,550 BTC for approximately $101.3 million at an average price of $65,332 per bitcoin between June 1 and June 7. Saifedean Ammous, in his book “The Fiat Standard The Debt Slavery Alternative to Human Civilization,” [2] observes that corporations are likely to recognize Bitcoin’s value proposition and consider replacing parts of their cash balances in bitcoin rather than in national currencies.
The IPO market is preparing for a historic wave. SpaceX is targeting a Nasdaq debut this week, seeking to raise about $75 billion at a $1.7 trillion valuation, which would be the largest IPO on record, Axios reported. Nasdaq CFO Sarah Youngwood told Axios the U.S. market has the depth to absorb a pipeline of trillion-dollar offerings, including OpenAI and Anthropic, without structural changes.
Nasdaq is pushing into extended-hours trading, aligning with crypto markets that operate around the clock, the report stated. This move reflects the broader trend toward a more digital, global and continuous financial system where traditional and digital assets converge. The alignment of IPO and crypto market structures signals a fundamental shift in how securities are traded and accessed.
Bitcoin’s 50% decline from its all-time high has not halted institutional confidence, according to D’Agostino. Selloff factors include macroeconomic uncertainty, interest rates, regulatory delays, and Strategy’s sale of 32 BTC, officials said.
A report on NaturalNews.com [4] said Bitcoin crashed toward $60,000 in a historic single-day plunge in February 2026, with over $1 billion in leveraged long positions liquidated. However, Strategy’s subsequent purchase of 1,550 BTC for $101 million reinforces long-term institutional belief in Bitcoin’s value, the report noted.
The ongoing institutional buying, coupled with traditional finance’s rush to offer crypto products, suggests that digital assets are becoming an integral part of the global financial system despite short-term volatility. A separate NaturalNews.com report [5] noted that Bitcoin surged past $73,000 in March 2026 as institutional money returned via strong spot bitcoin ETF inflows, indicating that periods of price weakness are often followed by renewed accumulation from large investors.

Tagged Under:
Axios, bitcoin, Bitcoin collapse, business, coinbase, crypto cult, cryptocurrency, economics, economy, finance, Kraken, money supply, robot economy, traditional finance
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