Strike CEO Jack Mallers rejects the notion that Wall Street is threatening Bitcoin

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Bitcoin payment app Strike CEO Jack Mallers said Wall Street’s growing involvement in Bitcoin poses no threat or conflict to the asset itself.

“My answer is no,” Mallers told Danny Knowles on the What Bitcoin Did podcast published on YouTube on Thursday in response to a question about whether institutional involvement threatens Bitcoin’s fundamental principles.
“If Wall Street’s entry into Bitcoin kills it, it will never succeed in the first place,” Mallers said.

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Jack Mallers spoke with Danny Knowles on the What Bitcoin Did podcast. Source: What Bitcoin did

“Bitcoin is based on the idea that it’s money for everyone. And you have to study all parts of it. That means your enemies too,” he said. “It means your ex-wife who cheated on you, it means your neighbor who is a fan of the opposing football club, and that’s all,” he added.

Bitcoin competes for global capital, says Mallers

Some Bitcoiners argue that Wall Street’s presence threatens Bitcoin’s original ethos by concentrating ownership, influence and custody of the asset in the hands of enormous financial institutions. Since the launch of Bitcoin cash ETFs in the US in January 2024, 11 funds have recorded a total of $59.38 billion in net inflows as of Friday, According to to Farside data.

However, Mallers said the “obvious consequence” is that Wall Street and other major customary investors will become involved in Bitcoin as the asset competes for global capital.

“Where there is wealth today, these things will be demonetized, just like real estate was demonetized, art will be demonetized, government debt will be demonetized, and Bitcoin will be monetized,” he said.

Some Bitcoiners have argued that growing institutional involvement could ultimately give enormous companies too much influence over Bitcoin itself. Bitcoiner and venture capitalist Nic Carter said that the major institutions that own Bitcoin may eventually lose patience with the creators of Bitcoin for not addressing quantum computing issues quickly enough. “I think the large institutions that currently exist in Bitcoin will get fed up and fire developers and hire new ones,” Carter said in February.

Wall Street attacks customers of cryptocurrency platforms

Over the past few years, there have been several changes in the adoption of Bitcoin and, more broadly, cryptocurrencies on Wall Street.

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This was recently announced on Tuesday that Morgan Stanley swept has launched pilot cryptocurrency trading on its E*Trade platform, charging lower base retail fees than some of the largest U.S. cryptocurrency and brokerage platforms.

The Wall Street bank charges customers 50 basis points on the dollar value of each cryptocurrency transaction, undercutting the standard retail prices of Coinbase, Robinhood and Charles Schwab.

Warehouse: Guide to Top and Emerging Global Cryptocurrency Hubs: Mid-2026

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