Coinbase‑PNC tie‑up brings direct Bitcoin access to ultra‑wealthy PNC clients

PNC Financial Services Group has opened direct Bitcoin trading for its richest clients through a new system built with Coinbase, according to a press release sent out on Tuesday.

The US bank switched on the feature months after the two firms announced their partnership in July. The setup lets private-bank customers place Bitcoin trades inside their investment accounts, using money already sitting in their PNC checking balances.

The service is only for PNC’s high-net-worth clients and family offices. It runs inside their investment portals, with PNC staying in control of the customer relationship while Coinbase handles the back-end.

The trades don’t require users to leave the bank’s ecosystem, and no public exchange interface is involved.

Coinbase runs trading while PNC protects the client link

Brett Tejpaul, the co-chief executive of Coinbase Institutional, said Coinbase provides the broker tools and tech systems that let PNC customers buy any amount of Bitcoin from inside the bank’s platform.

Brett compared the company’s institutional shift to how Amazon built AWS to power internet infrastructure from the background.

PNC supports Coinbase with treasury management and banking services as part of the partnership. Both sides get something out of it, but PNC keeps the front-end, which matters because the bank wants to stop fintech firms from pulling wealthy clients away.

Bill Demchak, PNC’s chief executive, said, “Fintech broadly wants to pick off parts of our relationship with product offerings that effectively make banking, in the extreme, just back office, and there’s no reason they should be able to do that.”

PNC has touched crypto before, but only through Bitcoin and Ether ETFs. That gave clients exposure without direct trading. Amanda Agati, the bank’s chief investment officer, said the bank is still early in its crypto plans but wants to keep clients from going elsewhere to invest.

Amanda said, “It is not so much about our client base being big investors today, but they’re looking to us for an understanding of what these things are, how it works, and does it make sense in the longer term.”

Amanda said PNC will open Bitcoin trading to institutional clients next year, including nonprofits, endowments, and foundations. That will move the service into the wider institutional world, where regulated investors handle larger pools of money.

PNC prepares for stablecoin changes as Washington sets rules

Top U.S. bank chiefs have been watching stablecoins closely. Jamie Dimon, Brian Moynihan, and Jane Fraser have each said stablecoins could weaken banks’ control over payments.

Their firms have signaled they are working on responses as Washington builds rules around the sector. President Donald Trump signed the first federal stablecoin law on Friday, giving crypto more clarity under U.S. regulation.

Bill said PNC expects a future stablecoin to come from a banking consortium, not one bank acting alone. He said PNC “would clearly be part of that” during an earnings call last week.

PNC’s internal work on payments is led by Emma Loftus, who joined the bank in 2019 after running global payments at JPMorgan. Emma has spent more than a decade studying how crypto and blockchain could work as alternative payment tools. She believes U.S. regulatory shifts will push more adoption, especially for payment transactions.

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Source: https://www.cryptopolitan.com/coinbase%E2%80%91pnc-tie%E2%80%91up-for-bitcoin-access/