No Turning Back for Crypto in Wall Street’s Engine Room, Says PwC

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Source:AdobeStock
  • PwC says institutional crypto adoption has become difficult to reverse as digital assets move beyond trading into payments, settlement and treasury operations.
  • Stablecoins and tokenised cash are increasingly used behind the scenes within banking and corporate infrastructure, often invisible to end users.
  • Regulatory clarity and cross-border coordination are reinforcing deeper institutional participation while raising compliance standards globally.

Crypto’s integration into institutional finance has reached a stage that is no longer reversible, according to PwC, as digital assets move deeper into core financial operations. The firm says activity is shifting away from speculative trading and toward practical use in payments, settlement, treasury management and balance-sheet functions.

PwC’s Global Crypto Regulation Report 2026 states that crypto is increasingly used outside of exchanges, operating quietly within internal transfers and cross-border payment systems. Stablecoins and tokenised cash are now flowing through corporate and banking infrastructure, often without direct interaction from end users.

The report argues that this functional deployment makes institutional crypto adoption difficult to dismantle once systems are embedded into operational workflows. PwC adds that blockchain-based infrastructure is becoming interwoven with traditional finance, reducing the likelihood of disengagement.

Related: UBS CEO: Blockchain’s Takeover of Traditional Banking Is Inevitable

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Regulatory Clarity Accelerates Institutional Momentum

Alongside operational adoption, PwC identifies a decisive shift in regulatory conditions, with crypto legislation progressing from draft frameworks into enforceable law. The firm says regulatory clarity is replacing uncertainty, driving competition between jurisdictions seeking to attract capital and legitimacy.

PwC also points to increasing cross-border regulatory coordination focused on market integrity, financial crime prevention and investor protection. This environment, the firm says, is supporting deeper institutional involvement while raising compliance standards across the sector.

PwC concludes that crypto has evolved into embedded financial infrastructure, positioning digital assets as a persistent component of global financial systems rather than a reversible trend.

Related: White House Crypto Czar: Banks and Crypto Will Merge Into One Industry

Rachel Lourdesamy
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Rachel Lourdesamy

Rachel is a freelance writer based in Sydney with experience within financial services, marketing, and corporate communications in the APAC region. An avid reader and a graduate of the University of Sydney, she covers topics including business, finance and human interest.

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