NEW YORK — When Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan show up at a crypto conference not just as speakers but also as sponsors, something has changed.
That shift will be on full display at Consensus Miami 2026, where an unprecedented roster of institutional heavyweights, federal policymakers, and crypto pioneers will gather May 5–7 to map the convergence of traditional finance and digital assets.
CFTC Chairman Michael Selig, Senator Ashley Moody, and White House official Patrick Witt will attend a Consensus event for the first time, alongside debut sponsors Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan, who join returning partners Fidelity, Mastercard, Bridge by Stripe, and many more.
The conference expects more than 15,000 attendees, with institutional attendance nearly doubling to roughly 35% of the audience – representing an estimated $10 trillion in assets under management, according to Brad Spies, Vice President of Consensus.
“We have reached a moment in which finance, crypto, tech, and policy are strongly converging forces,” Spies said. “All of these things that have been so hard to achieve – policy wins, institutional adoption, widespread stablecoin usage – that have been ‘off in the future’ for us mentally, are finally at our doorstep.”
The lineup
Headliners include Solana co-founder Anatoly Yakovenko, Strategy’s Michael Saylor, Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse, and Bullish CEO Tom Farley, alongside Cloudflare Chief Strategy Officer Stephanie Cohen, Shark Tank’s Kevin O’Leary, and Tether U.S. CEO Bo Hines.
The institutional bench runs deep. Morgan Stanley’s Jed Finn and Amy Oldenburg, ICE’s Michael Blaugrund, Nasdaq’s Tal Cohen, and DTCC’s Frank La Salla will be joined by senior executives from Charles Schwab (Sarah Hammer), Franklin Templeton (Sandy Kaul), JPMorgan (Kara Kennedy), and Citi (Ryan Rugg and Deborah Querub). On the fintech side, Mastercard’s Raja Rajamannar, Robinhood’s Johann Kerbrat, and MoneyGram’s Anthony SooHoo round out the roster.
Key topics include the future of stablecoins in the wake of the GENIUS Act (and potentially the CLARITY Act), agentic commerce, tokenization, and quantum computing’s implications for the industry. More than 20 sessions will be devoted to agentic commerce alone, highlighted by a panel titled “The Trillion Dollar Question – What’s the Framework for Agentic Payments?” featuring Erik Reppel, founder of Coinbase’s payments protocol x402.
‘A great opportunity’
The conference kicks off with its Institutional Summit at The Ritz-Carlton on May 5, convening institutional investors and asset managers to discuss how new capital should flow into digital assets. Speakers include Vanessa Melendez of Accent Partners, Nick Maffeo of ERS of Texas, Alex Pack of Hack VC, Tushar Jain of Multicoin Capital, and Timothy Barrett of Texas Tech University Systems. Sessions will cover prediction markets, equity tokenization, and how LPs are rethinking crypto allocation amid market volatility.
The following day brings Wealth Management Day, tailored specifically for financial advisors. Sessions will address how high-net-worth individuals can engage with digital assets, how crypto fits into IRA retirement accounts, and how the advisory industry can provide holistic planning around digital holdings — including generational wealth transfer.
Institutional Summit and Wealth Management Day
For the wealth management community, the timing feels urgent.
“I see the crypto space as a great opportunity for the wealth management field,” said Christina Lynn of Mariner Wealth Advisors, who is attending Wealth Management Day for the first time. “Financial advisors are slowly adopting and becoming more familiar with crypto topics, but we are just skimming the surface.”
Lynn warned that advisors who wait too long risk losing clients to a do-it-yourself approach. “Clients and prospects are doing their own crypto investments without an advisor, introducing risks and not integrating with the rest of their portfolio or planning advice,” she said. “If we don’t address this and bring crypto into our fold, it will become a bigger concern.”
Charles Schwab, which is preparing to launch Schwab Crypto for its millions of retail investors, is formally participating in Consensus for the first time this year. “Consensus is one of the most influential annual gatherings of the digital assets community, making it a natural place for Schwab,” said Joe Vietri, head of digital assets at the firm.
‘If you’re not informing yourself, you’re asking to become a dinosaur’
Matthew Tuttle, who leads leveraged ETF issuer Tuttle Capital Management, is coming to Consensus to deepen his understanding of stablecoins and tokenization – technologies he sees as inevitable forces in the fund industry.
“The next big thing is stablecoins, but I have not yet fully wrapped my head around the ‘why and how’ they work,” Tuttle said. “Then there is tokenization, which will affect our industry. I don’t know exactly how yet, but I know I will be talking more about it in five years. If you are an ETF issuer and are not informing yourself about this, you are asking to become a dinosaur.”
Tuttle recently filed to launch the T-Strive Digital Credit ETF (DGCR), managed in partnership with Strive, which will invest in bitcoin treasury firms’ preferred stock – instruments like those offered by MicroStrategy and Strive that yield roughly 10% annually. He intends to pay investors 14% per year.
His conviction in the space has shifted decisively. “There’s so much institutional backing that I don’t see how BTC can go to zero anymore,” he said. “Ten years ago, I’d say it could, but now I’m buying.”