A major Wall Street institution is shifting its stance on digital assets. One of America's largest banks has begun advising their clients to consider allocating up to 4% of their investment portfolios into crypto—yes, including fartcoin. This marks a notable pivot from traditional financial players who've historically kept their distance from the space. Whether this signals broader institutional acceptance or just cautious toe-dipping remains to be seen, but the fact that portfolio managers are now putting specific percentages on paper tells you something about where the conversation has moved. Four percent might not sound like much, but in wealth management terms, that's a legitimate allocation strategy rather than just speculative play money.
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GateUser-e133e9c9
· 12-02 20:18
Crypto that is worth only 4, the rest is all trash.
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Ser_This_Is_A_Casino
· 12-02 20:07
4%? Laughing to death, this is the beginning of TradFi slowly "giving up".
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rugdoc.eth
· 12-02 20:05
Ngl, Wall Street is really starting to take it seriously. What does the 4% figure indicate? It means that large institutions can no longer pretend.
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SlowLearnerWang
· 12-02 20:04
When the hell did I hear about this? 4%? It should have been allocated a long time ago, alright?
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LiquidationOracle
· 12-02 19:52
Ngl, the shift on Wall Street is too fast; a 4% allocation sounds reasonable, but I still have some doubts... Is it real?
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LiquidationWatcher
· 12-02 19:51
ngl, Wall Street's turn is real, but that 4% figure is still quite safe.
A major Wall Street institution is shifting its stance on digital assets. One of America's largest banks has begun advising their clients to consider allocating up to 4% of their investment portfolios into crypto—yes, including fartcoin. This marks a notable pivot from traditional financial players who've historically kept their distance from the space. Whether this signals broader institutional acceptance or just cautious toe-dipping remains to be seen, but the fact that portfolio managers are now putting specific percentages on paper tells you something about where the conversation has moved. Four percent might not sound like much, but in wealth management terms, that's a legitimate allocation strategy rather than just speculative play money.