- Bank of America lifts restrictions: Bitcoin ETFs now officially recommendable.
- Advisors managing $2.9T can pitch 1-4% portfolio exposure to BTC ETFs.
- Morgan Stanley, BlackRock & Fidelity already gave green light months ago.
Crypto Patel broke the news that Bank of America has quietly authorized its army of over 15,000 financial advisors to actively recommend spot Bitcoin ETFs to clients, with suggested allocations ranging from 1-4% of total portfolios. This is the same institution whose advisors were previously barred from even discussing crypto with clients deemed “risk-averse.
”The policy reversal marks the completion of a clean sweep across America’s largest wealth managers. Morgan Stanley, Wells Fargo, UBS, BlackRock, and Fidelity all opened the Bitcoin ETF gates earlier in 2025. Bank of America, managing roughly $2.9 trillion in client assets through Merrill Lynch and its private bank, was the final domino.
Industry sources say the decision came directly from executive leadership after months of internal pressure and FOMO over competitors raking in billions in BTC ETF inflows. One advisor anonymously told CoinCryptonewz: “Six months ago we were told to steer clients away. Now we have model portfolios that literally include 2-3% Bitcoin ETF as the default.”
The timing couldn’t be more symbolic. With Bitcoin trading above $92,000 and spot ETFs already holding over 1.1 million BTC, traditional finance is no longer dipping toes—it’s diving headfirst. Analysts estimate this single policy shift could unlock another $50-100 billion in institutional inflows over the next 12-18 months. The great wealth transfer from legacy assets into digital gold just went from trickle to flood. When the bank that once mocked crypto now tells grandma to buy Bitcoin, the supercycle isn’t coming—it’s already here.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. CoinCryptoNewz is not responsible for any losses incurred. Readers should do their own research before making financial decisions.




