The financial giant is targeting the digital asset market with a gradual approach.
Charles Schwab is preparing to enter the world of digital assets. During the Reuters Next conference in New York, CEO Rick Wurster announced that the company will introduce spot trading for bitcoin and ether in the first half of 2026, acknowledging that client demand has reached levels that cannot be ignored.
The company has chosen a phased rollout rather than an immediate large-scale implementation. Wurster explained that the system will initially be tested by internal employees, then extended to a selected group of invited clients, and only afterward made available to the broader user base. The stated goal is to ensure the experience is stable and scalable before reaching millions of investors.
Trading is not the only area of expansion for Schwab. Wurster said the company is entering a phase where acquisitions could play a more significant role in its corporate strategy. Schwab is open to acquiring companies that could strengthen its product offering, potentially including firms in the digital asset sector, provided valuations are reasonable and the acquisition aligns with strategic objectives. Wurster clarified that no negotiations are currently underway, but the doors remain open.
Schwab’s potential entry into bitcoin spot trading has raised questions about fees. Bloomberg’s Eric Balchunas argued that pricing policy will determine how disruptive Schwab will be. Considering the company already offers zero-commission trading for stocks and ETFs, a competitive offering in the crypto sector could put pressure on exchanges that rely on transaction fees. Balchunas suggested that fees below 50 basis points could force the industry to rethink margins, especially with Bitcoin spot ETFs already providing exposure at tight spreads.





