Schwab Is Finally Moving From Exposure To Ownership
For years, large brokers gave clients indirect access to crypto.
ETFs
futures
crypto-related stocks
Now that phase is ending.
Charles Schwab has officially announced “Schwab Crypto,” a new service that will allow retail clients to directly trade Bitcoin and Ethereum, with a phased rollout beginning in the coming weeks.
That shift matters more than the feature itself.
Because it moves one of the largest U.S. brokers from “crypto exposure” to actual ownership.
For months, Schwab had been signaling this move, something we covered earlier in our breakdown of how Charles Schwab was moving closer to direct Bitcoin and Ethereum trading as Schwab Crypto neared launch.
This Is A $12 Trillion Signal — Not Just A Product Launch
Schwab isn’t a niche player testing a new feature.
It’s one of the largest brokerage platforms in the world, managing over $12 trillion in client assets and serving tens of millions of accounts.
That scale changes the interpretation.
This isn’t crypto entering finance.
It’s finance fully stepping into crypto.
And it’s happening at the exact moment institutional demand is already consolidating around BTC, as we saw in our breakdown of how capital is concentrating back into Bitcoin through ETF inflows.
The Product Is Simple — And That’s The Point
At launch, Schwab Crypto will:
- offer direct BTC and ETH trading
- integrate with existing brokerage accounts
- provide research, education, and support
- charge around 0.75% per trade
Clients will hold crypto in a separate account through Schwab’s banking entity, while still viewing and managing it alongside stocks and other assets.
This is not designed to compete with crypto-native exchanges on features.
It’s designed to remove friction.
Convenience Is The Real Competitive Edge
The pitch is straightforward:
keep everything in one place
Schwab is betting that:
- trust
- familiarity
- simplicity
will matter more than advanced trading tools.
That’s a very different model from crypto-native platforms.
Instead of pulling users into crypto, it brings crypto into the existing financial workflow.
We’ve already seen similar structural moves in our analysis of how traditional finance is gradually absorbing blockchain-based assets into its core systems.
This Changes The Competitive Landscape
The bigger implication is what this does to the market structure.
Schwab is not entering alone.
Fidelity, Robinhood, and others are already pushing into direct crypto access.
Which means the competition is shifting:
from exchanges vs exchanges
to:
brokerages vs exchanges
And that’s a different fight entirely.
Because brokerages already have:
distribution
user trust
existing capital
Crypto platforms have:
native infrastructure
liquidity
speed
The gap between those two worlds is closing fast.
This Also Reinforces A Bigger Narrative Around Bitcoin
There’s another layer to this.
Schwab is not launching with altcoins.
Just:
Bitcoin
Ethereum
That’s not случайно.
It reflects a broader trend where institutional adoption is narrowing around a small set of “acceptable” assets — especially BTC.
We’ve seen that dynamic play out repeatedly, including in our analysis of how Bitcoin continues to dominate market structure even when altcoin narratives rotate.
In other words, this is not just adoption.
It’s selective adoption.
The Real Question Is What Happens Next
This launch raises a bigger question.
What happens when:
millions of brokerage users
can buy crypto
without leaving their main account
That’s when behavior changes.
Not because of ideology.
Because of convenience.
And once that happens, crypto stops feeling like a separate system.
It becomes just another asset class.
BTCUSA Insight
Schwab launching spot crypto trading isn’t about catching up.
It’s about integration.
Crypto spent years building parallel infrastructure.
Now traditional finance is starting to absorb it directly into its own systems.
And once that process reaches scale, the question won’t be whether institutions are entering crypto.
It will be whether crypto can stay distinct from them.
