Wall Street is Bought in On Crypto’s Upside Potential, But Not Its Tech
Wall Street’s appetite for crypto is stronger than ever. BlackRock’s Bitcoin ETF has broken inflow records. Fidelity and VanEck have followed suit with new spot products. Even the Nasdaq has hinted at expanding its digital asset trading infrastructure. Yet, for all this momentum, almost none of it actually happens onchain.
Institutions now treat crypto as a legitimate asset class, but not as a place to operate. The bulk of trading, settlement, and market-making still takes place on private servers and traditional rails.
The reason is simple: blockchains, in their current form, don’t yet meet institutional performance standards. Until they can deliver predictable speed, reliable data access, and operational resilience on par with Wall Street’s systems, the largest players will continue to trade off-chain, limiting transparency, liquidity, and the very innovation that made crypto compelling in the first place.
Institutions avoid trading onchain because most blockchains don’t meet their standards. Institutions require both speed and reliability, and blockchains tend to struggle with the latter.
Many blockchains become congested under peak stress, causing transactions to fail unpredictably. Gas fees can change erratically as network activity fluctuates, introducing additional chaos. Institutions refuse to operate in such an unpredictable environment.
Institutions also need to ensure, beyond doubt, that trades will settle correctly, even when many things happen at once. Some blockchains such as Layer 2s or rollups rely on optimistic settlement techniques that work most of the time, but sometimes require transactions to be rolled back, reversing settled transactions.
Within these constraints, institutions need to ensure they are able to trade as quickly as possible. In traditional markets, institutions have paid millions to shorten the length of fiber optic cable between them and the Nasdaq, allowing them to settle trades a nano second ahead of competitors. Blockchain latency is still in the seconds or even minutes, which is not competitive at all.
It’s important to note that modern institutions have access to crypto ETFs, enabling them to purchase crypto exposure through traditional markets using the optimized fiber optic cables they are familiar with. This means that to attract onchain institutional trading, a blockchain must surpass the speeds of traditional markets (why would institutions switch to a slower trading venue?).
Institutions won’t simply create a Metamask wallet and start trading on Ethereum. They require custom blockchains built to meet the same performance, reliability, and accountability standards as traditional markets.

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