On Tuesday, December 2, Vanguard, that stalwart of stodgy portfolios and buttoned-up spreadsheets, will permit its clients to trade exchange-traded funds tracking Bitcoin and “select other cryptos.” One might imagine the boardroom was as tense as a Dostoevsky novel, though the only existential crisis seems to involve Ether and XRP.
This concession-yes, concession, not innovation-extends to Solana and Ether, though Vanguard insists it remains as interested in launching its own crypto products as a teetotaler in a distillery. With 50 million clients and $11 trillion in assets, the firm’s sudden embrace of digital tokens feels less like progress and more like a grumpy uncle finally admitting the internet exists.
Vanguard, after years of crypto-resistant hauteur, now permits spot ETF trading.
Includes BTC, ETH, XRP, and SOL-though they’ll still let others bear the risk.
via @emily_graffeo
– Nate Geraci (@NateGeraci) December 1, 2025
The Eternal Struggle Between Tradition and Trend
The decision, driven by “persistent demand,” is less a revolution than a sigh. Since January 2024, Bitcoin ETFs have drawn billions, proving that even the most ardent skeptics can be lured by the scent of profit. Andrew Kadjeski, Vanguard’s investment maestro, assured Bloomberg that these funds have “performed as designed,” a phrase that likely made no one feel particularly reassured.
“Cryptocurrency ETFs have withstood market turbulence,” Kadjeski remarked, as if describing a particularly resilient species of houseplant.
He further noted that administrative processes have “matured”-a generous assessment of systems that once required fax machines for trade confirmations. Yet, Vanguard remains steadfast in its refusal to create its own crypto products, preferring to let others play pioneer while it collects fees like a tollbooth on the road to speculation.
“We aim to provide a platform for products our clients choose,” Kadjeski added, as though Vanguard’s role is less financial architect and more passive observer of the chaos.
This pivot followed the appointment of Salim Ramji, a former BlackRock executive with a penchant for blockchain, as CEO. Whether this marks the dawn of a new era or merely a temporary truce in Vanguard’s war on innovation remains to be seen. The markets, meanwhile, yawned through the announcement, too busy flushing out leveraged traders to care.
The ETF Ballet
Spot Bitcoin ETFs continued their modest inflow streak, though the $370,000 surge paled against Fidelity’s $67 million grab and ARK 21Shares’ $7.4 million waltz. BlackRock’s IBIT, meanwhile, suffered a $74 million outflow, proving even titans trip on the crypto dance floor.
As institutions clasp hands and waltz onward, retail traders clutch their pearls. Grayscale, undeterred, prepares to launch its Chainlink ETF, though LINK’s 30% plunge suggests the altcoin ballroom is more haunted house than gala.
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2025-12-02 12:45