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    Ex-CFTC Acting Chair Declares 2026 the Year Institutions Go All-In on Crypto

    Story Highlights
    • A former CFTC leader says years of institutional crypto testing are about to turn into real deployment in 2026.

    • Regulatory clarity - not price action - is emerging as the key trigger for large institutions entering crypto.

    • Compliance, governance, and trusted infrastructure may decide which crypto firms survive the next phase.

    Crypto has spent years on the edge of institutional adoption. According to former Acting CFTC Chair Caroline D. Pham, that waiting period is almost over.

    Speaking from the New York Stock Exchange on Taking Stock, Pham said 2026 will mark the moment when crypto, tokenization, and blockchain move from testing to full-scale institutional use.

    “Increased institutional adoption in crypto and blockchain technology for 2026” will depend on firms that can “scale responsibly and be compliant – especially with KYC, AML, and other important protections,” she said.

    Institutions Have Been Preparing for This Moment

    Pham, who recently transitioned to the private sector as CLO at Moonpay, pushed back on the idea that Wall Street is new to crypto. She said major financial institutions have been working behind the scenes for nearly a decade.

    “Institutions have been working on blockchain technology, tokenization, and crypto as an asset class since at least 2017 – sometimes even 2016,” she explained, referencing years of pilots and internal testing across banks, asset managers, and exchanges.

    What held them back wasn’t lack of interest but uncertainty.

    Regulatory Clarity Changed the Timeline

    That uncertainty began to fade over the past year, according to Pham, as U.S. regulators started sending clearer signals.

    She pointed to the White House Crypto Report, the CFTC’s “Crypto Sprint,” and the SEC’s “Project Crypto” as key steps that helped align crypto with existing market rules.

    “The rules are technology-neutral,” Pham said. “It’s just a different format – from paper to electronic to now digital.”

    In other words, crypto doesn’t need a new rulebook. It needs the old one applied properly.

    Compliance Will Decide Who Wins

    Pham was clear about what separates crypto firms that scale from those that struggle.

    “It is going to be those who understand how to be regulatory compliant… and who know how to be that trusted infrastructure partner to regulated institutions,” she said.

    Governance, risk controls, and existing legal frameworks matter more than speed or hype.

    Why 2026 Is About Choice

    Looking ahead, Pham said institutions will have multiple paths into crypto, rather than a single, forced model.

    From futures exchanges to securities platforms and state-level frameworks, 2026 will be about “choice and access to markets.”

    After years of groundwork, institutional crypto is here to stay.

    Never Miss a Beat in the Crypto World!

    Stay ahead with breaking news, expert analysis, and real-time updates on the latest trends in Bitcoin, altcoins, DeFi, NFTs, and more.

    FAQs

    Which parts of the crypto industry are most affected by this shift?

    Exchanges, stablecoin issuers, custodians, and tokenization platforms are most impacted, as they interface directly with banks and asset managers.

    What challenges could still slow institutional crypto adoption after 2026?

    Operational risk, cross-border regulation differences, and enforcement actions could delay rollouts. Institutions move cautiously once real capital is deployed.

    What happens next from a regulatory perspective?

    Agencies like the SEC and CFTC are expected to clarify enforcement boundaries while Congress debates longer-term digital asset legislation. The pace will shape market structure.

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