Home » Morgan Stanley to Launch Digital Wallet For Tokenized Assets

Morgan Stanley to Launch Digital Wallet For Tokenized Assets

by Terron Gold
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Morgan Stanley is preparing to roll out a digital wallet designed to hold cryptocurrencies and tokenized real-world assets, including private-company equity, as part of a broader push into digital finance. The plan, reported by Barron’s on Thursday, places the bank’s wallet launch in the second half of 2026, alongside expanded crypto trading and private-market access. The move is intended to connect wealth management, workplace services, and private markets, with the wallet serving as a single custody layer for both traditional and blockchain-based assets as client portfolios evolve.
 
The digital wallet will be developed by Morgan Stanley and is expected to support a wide range of tokenized assets, from cryptocurrencies to digitized equity in private companies. Jed Finn, head of the firm’s wealth management division, described the wallet as a core part of the bank’s long-term strategy rather than a standalone crypto experiment, according to crypto commentator MartyParty.
 
Morgan Stanley has previously signaled this direction. The bank plans to introduce Bitcoin, Ether, and Solana trading through E*Trade in the first half of 2026, using external partners for liquidity and custody. The idea is to give those assets a clear place to live, letting clients hold and move tokenized investments without juggling separate platforms.
 
The wallet rollout follows a series of crypto-related filings. The strategy became harder to ignore this week when Morgan Stanley filed for Bitcoin and Solana spot ETFs, dangling staking rewards on the Solana side. Combined with its earlier Ethereum ETF filing, the moves suggest a broader strategy spanning trading, custody, and asset management. With clearer guidance around crypto ETFs and stablecoins in the U.S., large banks now have more room to integrate digital assets into mainstream wealth products without operating in regulatory gray zones.
 
Rather than targeting speculative demand, Morgan Stanley appears to be focused on building infrastructure. Launching a proprietary wallet signals that tokenization is moving beyond pilot projects and into core wealth-management systems.  If successful, the model could accelerate adoption of tokenized stocks, bonds, and private equity by placing them inside familiar banking interfaces, where traditional capital already lives.

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