Key Takeaways:
Vanguard’s stance on digital assets has long stood out as one of the most conservative in traditional finance. That changed this week as the world’s second-largest asset manager confirmed it will begin supporting crypto ETFs and crypto-focused mutual funds on its brokerage platform. The move signals a dramatic departure from its rigid, anti-crypto policy and underscores how deeply digital assets have penetrated mainstream finance.
Below is a detailed breakdown of the implications of this shift, why it matters for the broader market, and how it changes the landscape for investors.
For years, Vanguard resisted pressure to integrate digital assets, even as competitors like BlackRock, Fidelity, Franklin Templeton, and Invesco aggressively expanded into crypto. Vanguard repeatedly argued that crypto was too volatile and lacked long-term investment merit.
That era is officially over.
Beginning Tuesday, Vanguard brokerage users will be allowed to trade ETFs and mutual funds that primarily hold regulated cryptocurrencies. Eligible assets include exposure to major networks such as:
The move gives investors access to regulated products such as spot Bitcoin ETFs, ETH ETFs, diversified digital-asset funds, and crypto basket products, all of which have attracted hundreds of billions in flows across U.S. markets since 2024.
This is not a small shift. Vanguard’s brokerage arm serves more than 50 million investors, many of whom have never had direct access to crypto exposure through the platform.
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The shift in institutional finance is motivated by a number of factors that are transforming the firm:
Solo spot Bitcoin ETFs have passed over $120 billion AUM in 18 months, and certain funds such as the IBIT by BlackRock, has been rated as one of the best ETFs worldwide in terms of inflows.
With crypto ETF infrastructure now tested, liquid, and highly regulated, Vanguard no longer sees digital-asset funds as an operational or compliance risk.
Crypto ETFs have outpaced the early growth of gold ETFs, fixed-income ETFs, and thematic funds. Even during market downturns, trading volumes have remained strong, and liquidity depth has improved across Bitcoin, Ether, and multi-asset crypto funds.
This consistency helped convince Vanguard leadership that digital assets, when wrapped in ETF and mutual fund structures, now meet the firm’s standards for:
Even the most conservative asset managers are now acknowledging that the crypto ETF market has “institutionalized.”
Vanguard’s reversal marks a psychological milestone. The most significant traditional finance establishment is finally opening its doors to digital assets, which is an indication that crypto is not a marginal asset category but is now a component of mainstream portfolio building.
Of particular significance to the decision is the fact that:
This adoption has seen close to all the largest asset managers in the United States such as BlackRock, Fidelity, State Street, Franklin Templeton, and WisdomTree all participate in crypto in one way.
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Vanguard will not launch its own Bitcoin or crypto ETF. Executives made that clear.
However, the firm will treat crypto ETFs the same way it treats gold ETFs and other non-core asset classes: accessible, regulated, and supported on its trading platform.
The company will continue to exclude:
This ensures Vanguard remains aligned with its conservative risk framework while still expanding access.
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