Finance

What to know:
- EY’s digital assets leaders say wallet infrastructure, not just tokenization, will define market winners. (Spoiler: It’s not just a crypto bros’ hobby.)
- Tokenization is already reshaping financial market infrastructure, but real disruption lies in capital efficiency and programmable transaction chains. (Because nothing says “disruption” like making your money do backflips.)
- With regulation catching up and wallet adoption accelerating, EY sees a strategic imperative for financial firms to act now. (Translation: “Don’t get left behind while your competitors swipe right on blockchain.”)
In the evolving landscape of digital finance, Big Four consultancy firm EY has zeroed in on what it believes is the next defining frontier: wallets. Because nothing says “future-proof” like a digital piggybank.
Wallets are fast becoming the critical interface for the next era of financial services, not just tools for holding cryptocurrency, according to Mark Nichols, principal at EY. (Because who needs a bank when you can just trust a wallet?)
“The wallet is the strategy,” Nichols who co-leads the firm’s digital assets consulting business, told CoinDesk in an interview. “Who owns the wallet, who provisions the wallet, will win the client relationship.” (Because nothing says “customer loyalty” like a wallet that’s basically a cryptocurrency version of a dating app.)
Nichols and his West Coast counterpart, Rebecca Carvatt, view wallets as more than infrastructure. They’re the gateway to storing, moving and managing tokenized value in a world where financial instruments, from payments to private credit, are increasingly moving onchain, he said. (Because who needs a physical bank when your wallet is just a few taps away?)
Not just custody: Wallets as the hub of tokenized finance
The vision is expansive. Far from being a niche utility for crypto enthusiasts, wallets are becoming the connective tissue of a broader tokenized financial system. Wallets will soon be indispensable for retail investors, asset managers, treasurers and even commercial banks, according to Carvatt, co-leader of EY’s digital assets consulting business. (Because nothing says “financial inclusion” like a wallet that’s also a cryptocurrency wallet.)
“They’re going to be the access point for everything – payments, tokenized assets and stablecoins,” she said. (Because who needs a bank account when you can just have a wallet that’s also a stablecoin?)
EY’s perspective positions wallets as the new bank accounts of the future, with services tailored not just to individuals, but to corporates and institutional investors who require sophisticated integration with risk systems, compliance tools and real-time capital flows. (Because nothing says “sophistication” like a wallet that’s also a compliance tool.)
The implication is clear: whoever controls the wallet controls the relationship. For financial institutions already losing ground to crypto-native platforms, the shift is existential. (Because nothing says “existential crisis” like realizing your competitors are using wallets instead of ATMs.)
Beyond liquidity: The real promise of tokenization
The broader shift to tokenization is often framed as a play for liquidity, but EY believes that narrative undersells the true impact. “It’s not just about liquidity,” Nichols says. “Liquidity isn’t the be-all and end-all, it’s about the utility that onchain finance enables.” (Because who needs liquidity when you can have a wallet that’s also a financial advisor?)
What EY sees instead is the emergence of blockchain as a real-time infrastructure for financial markets, one that allows for programmable transaction chains, and fundamentally reshapes how capital is managed. Tokenization enables atomic settlement, sure, but its real power lies in margin optimization and operational efficiency. (Because nothing says “operational efficiency” like a blockchain that’s also a margin optimizer.)
Nichols points to scenarios where firms can use stablecoins or tokenized assets to meet margin calls more frequently and precisely. That, in turn, reduces initial margin requirements, freeing up capital for investment. “It’s about better risk alignment and real-time capital management,” he says. “And the wallet becomes the gateway to making that possible.” (Because who needs a bank when your wallet is also a capital manager?)
A decade in the space: EY’s deep crypto bench
While some firms are racing to catch up, EY has been building in the digital asset space for more than 12 years. Its early investments in crypto-native audit and compliance practices now span thousands of professionals, supporting everything from hedge fund tax returns to tokenized M&A advisory. (Because nothing says “longevity” like a firm that’s been in crypto since the days of “HODL” and “blockchain” was just a buzzword.)
“We’ve worked with every client profile – large banks, asset managers, exchanges, digital natives, infrastructure providers,” Nichols says. “and have been working in the digital asset ecosystem for over a decade.”
EY’s hedge fund audit business was one of the earliest to support crypto, and its advisory team has helped firms prepare for public listings and complex regulatory environments. The firm has developed bespoke services for wallet monitoring, onchain compliance, and token-native tax reporting. It also continues to advise traditional financial institutions on how to design safe, compliant digital asset strategies, particularly as they begin to develop or integrate wallet infrastructure. (Because nothing says “compliance” like a firm that’s also a tax accountant and a blockchain expert.)
Wallets for everyone: A segment-by-segment view
EY is clear that wallet needs are not monolithic. Consumers want seamless UX and secure access to payments and crypto. Corporates need integration with treasury functions and regulatory compliance across jurisdictions. Institutional clients demand secure custody, connectivity to decentralized finance (DeFi) and staking products, and embedded risk tooling. (Because who needs a one-size-fits-all wallet when you can have a custom one?)
Self-custody, EY argues, won’t be mainstream. The average user or institution doesn’t want to manage their own private keys. Instead, trusted wallet providers will emerge, banks, fintechs, or specialized custodians; each tailoring their offering based on the segment they serve. (Because nothing says “trust” like a wallet provider that’s also a bank.)
Provisioning wallets, then, becomes a strategic imperative. Whether firms choose to build their own, acquire providers, or form partnerships, the wallet is the new front door to financial services. Firms that act now will reduce future customer acquisition costs and own a more defensible position in the digital asset ecosystem. (Because nothing says “defensible” like a wallet that’s also a marketing strategy.)
Regulation: A catalyst, not a roadblock
One of the most persistent beliefs about tokenization is that regulation is a blocker. But EY’s leaders disagree. “We already have the regulatory framework in core markets, and alongside the broader industry, the passage of market structure legislation will allow for remaining issues to be ironed out,” Nichols says. “A security is a security, a commodity is a commodity. Blockchain is technology.” (Because nothing says “regulatory clarity” like a statement that’s also a crypto meme.)
In the U.S., the GENIUS Act and existing Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) exemptions provide pathways for compliant tokenized products. Globally, jurisdictions are racing to attract digital asset innovation with evolving licensing regimes. While harmonization is still in progress, the momentum is unmistakable. (Because nothing says “momentum” like a global race to regulate blockchain.)
EY sees this moment as a call to maturity, an inflection point where infrastructure is catching up to vision. “We’re past the experimentation phase,” Carvatt says. “Now it’s about safe, scalable implementation.” (Because nothing says “scalable” like a firm that’s also a blockchain expert.)
Rethinking asset management from the ground up
Perhaps nowhere is the impact of tokenization and wallet infrastructure more profound than in asset management. A typical fund currently requires a distribution network, an investment team, a custodian, a fund administrator, and regulatory reporting channels. With tokenization and smart contracts, much of that stack becomes programmable, and potentially obsolete. (Because nothing says “obsolete” like a fund that’s also a blockchain.)
“Asset managers just want to build great portfolios,” Nichols says. “Blockchain lets them do that without all the legacy friction.” (Because nothing says “legacy friction” like a fund that’s also a blockchain.)
By tokenizing fund underliers and embedding logic into smart contracts, asset managers can automate functions like distribution, compliance, and reporting. This opens the door to lower fees, broader investor access, and new types of products, particularly in private credit and alternatives, where cost has historically been a barrier. (Because nothing says “lower fees” like a blockchain that’s also a cost-cutting measure.)
“From the unbanked to the unbrokered, we’re seeing more people gain exposure to assets that were previously out of reach,” Carvatt says. “That’s powerful.” (Because nothing says “powerful” like a wallet that’s also a financial democratizer.)
The future of finance is onchain
Whether for crypto, payments, or tokenized assets, wallets will be the gateway to a new financial reality. Firms that ignore this will risk irrelevance. Those that embrace it will own the infrastructure, and the customer relationship, at the heart of digital finance.
“The future of finance is on-chain,” Nichols says. “And the wallet is at its center.” (Because nothing says “center” like a wallet that’s also a financial hub.)
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2026-02-07 17:24