Standard Chartered Shakes Up Finance: Launches Bitcoin & Ethereum Trading for Institutional Clients
Wall Street's old guard just got a crypto wake-up call.
Standard Chartered—the 160-year-old banking giant—just flipped the script by rolling out Bitcoin and Ethereum trading services for institutional clients. No more sneaking through backdoor OTC desks or shady offshore exchanges.
The irony? Banks spent years dismissing crypto as a 'fraud' before realizing they'd rather collect fees than principles.
Expect more suits to follow—nothing moves faster than greed in a bear market.


Spot Bitcoin and Ethereum Service for Institutional Clients
Introduced as a service targeting major financial institutions, Standard Chartered’s Bitcoin and Ethereum trading positions the bank as the first systemically important global entity to offer spot cryptocurrency transactions. According to Rene Michau, the service is limited to asset managers and multinational corporations, with retail investors not yet included in the offering.
Initially, this initiative will focus exclusively on Bitcoin and Ethereum, with plans to expand to include derivative instruments such as non-deliverable forward contracts in the future. This approach is intended to enable portfolios to increase cryptocurrency investments within a structured risk management framework.
Michau highlights the increased demand for spot cryptocurrencies on the corporate side, emphasizing the shift of liquidity to over-the-counter channels. By offering access not yet provided by its competitors, the bank seeks to secure an early advantage in the market.
Seamless Integration with Existing Infrastructure
Standard Chartered has integrated spot trades into its existing FX platforms, eliminating the need for customers to learn a new interface. This reduces integration costs while maintaining market depth in high-frequency trading flows. Whether executed through external safekeeping services like Zodia Custody or within the bank’s vaults, client reconciliation processes remain unchanged.
In the event of high demand, the bank may offer 24/5 access, enabling corporate investors across different time zones to quickly access liquidity. Looking ahead, the bank’s crypto custody arm, Libeara, plans to incorporate tokenization services into the system, aiming to merge custody, transaction, and securitization processes within a single ecosystem.
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