JPMorgan Joins the Revolution: Ethereum Emerges as Centerpiece in DeFi Era

Wall Street's sleeping giant just woke up to decentralized finance—and they're betting on Ethereum.
The Institutional Shift
JPMorgan's strategic move signals what crypto natives knew years ago: traditional finance can't ignore smart contract platforms forever. While banks spent decades building walled gardens, Ethereum built the entire neighborhood.
DeFi's Unstoppable Momentum
Ethereum's dominance isn't accidental—it's the result of network effects that make Wall Street's legacy systems look like dial-up internet. The platform processes more value daily than some national economies, yet bankers still call it 'experimental.'
The New Financial Architecture
Forget waiting three days for settlements. Ethereum finalizes transactions in minutes while cutting out the middlemen who've been taking their cut since the Medici era. Traditional finance is learning what crypto anarchists whispered in 2017: if you can't beat 'em, join 'em.
Wall Street's latest 'innovation'? Recognizing what's been working without their permission for years—typical banker timing, always late to the party but first to take credit.
Citi joins Wall Street’s race into Riyadh
Citi’s opening comes days before Fraser arrives in Riyadh to speak at the Future Investment Initiative (FII), which is better known as “Davos in the Desert,” an annual investor forum that brings together global financial leaders and Saudi’s governing council.
Also in attendance will be Jamie Dimon, the CEO of JPMorgan Chase, and David Solomon, the head of Goldman Sachs.
Earlier this month, JPMorgan obtained its own regional HQ license, while Morgan Stanley and BlackRock have already secured those kinds of approvals.
Saudi regulation state that any foreign company seeking government contracts must have a local headquarters, and that includes access to the powerful Public Investment Fund, which has become a magnet for international banks and investors.
US and Saudi’s complicated partnership built on oil and power
The US-Saudi relationship began in 1933, formalized through the 1951 Mutual Defense Assistance Agreement.It created a simple exchange: American protection for Saudi oil.
Over the decades, the two countries built one of the world’s most durable alliances, despite stark differences between an Islamic absolute monarchy and a secular republic. The partnership deepened after 1945, with Washington providing military support while Riyadh kept oil flowing in dollars.
That understanding often required the U.S. to look the other way on issues like Wahhabism, human rights, and state-linked terrorism claims.
Cooperation reached its peak after the 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, when both sides backed anti-Soviet militias. The 1991 Gulf War further solidified military collaboration, as U.S., Saudi, and British troops expelled Iraq from Kuwait.
Still, fractures emerged over Israel, the 1973 oil embargo, the Iraq invasion in 2003, and fallout from the September 11 attacks, when most hijackers were Saudi nationals. Tensions resurfaced under Barack Obama, before Donald Trump’s visit to Riyadh in 2017 rekindled political warmth. But the 2018 killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul reignited outrage. Turkish investigators and U.S. intelligence agencies concluded the murder was ordered by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, drawing sanctions against Saudi officials. Congress tried to halt U.S. arms sales linked to the Yemen war, but Trump’s administration blocked the move, protecting one of Washington’s most lucrative defense partners.
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