Morgan Stanley has dropped key restrictions on cryptocurrency exposure, allowing all of its wealth management clients to allocate funds into crypto products starting October 15. The decision, shared in an internal memo obtained by CNBC, also opens crypto investment options to retirement and other account types for the first time.
As noted in a CNBC article, the firm previously limited access to clients with at least $1.5 million in assets and a high-risk tolerance, reflecting Wall Street’s traditionally cautious stance toward digital assets. Now, advisors will be permitted to recommend crypto funds to any investor under a new automated risk-monitoring framework designed to prevent overexposure in volatile markets.
The bank’s global investment committee has issued new guidelines suggesting allocations of up to 4%, depending on a client’s goals and risk profile. “Cryptocurrency remains speculative but increasingly popular,” said Lisa Shalett, Morgan Stanley’s Chief Investment Officer for wealth management, in an internal note.
Currently, the firm offers exposure through Bitcoin funds managed by BlackRock and Fidelity but may add other crypto products as the asset class continues to mature.
Retail ambitions and crypto access converge
The announcement comes just weeks after Morgan Stanley confirmed plans to bring direct crypto trading to its ETrade subsidiary, signaling a synchronized strategy between its wealth and retail divisions. The ETrade rollout, slated for early 2026, will let clients buy and sell Bitcoin (BTC), Ether (ETH), and Solana (SOL) directly, using ZeroHash for custody and settlement infrastructure.
Both moves position Morgan Stanley as one of the first U.S. banks to unify crypto access across both institutional and retail channels. By contrast, rivals like Robinhood and Fidelity have focused on retail-first models, while traditional banks have largely restricted digital assets to elite investors.
The shift also reflects intensifying competition in the brokerage space. As retail platforms blur the line between traditional and digital markets, Morgan Stanley’s expansion signals that crypto is no longer treated as a speculative outlier but as an integrated component of client portfolios.
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