While parts of the banking industry are still maneuvering to blunt crypto legislation on Capitol Hill, one of America’s biggest lenders is quietly building a larger bet on Ethereum. A Q1 2026 13F filing submitted by Wells Fargo to the SEC, spotted by WuBlockchain, shows the bank meaningfully increased its holdings of two spot Ethereum ETFs during the quarter.
The position in the iShares Ethereum Trust (ETHA) grew from roughly 672,600 shares in Q4 2025 to around 1.1 million shares, a jump of 63.5%. Meanwhile, its stake in the Bitwise Ethereum ETF (ETHW) rose 37% to 257,000 shares. The additions arrived during a quarter when Ethereum’s price was already recovering ground, and the contrast with other banking-sector behavior is striking.
The 13F disclosure captures holdings as of the end of Q1 2026, but the exact timing of the purchases within the quarter isn’t public. Wells Fargo’s ETHA stake crossing the million-share threshold marks a noticeable step up from the more modest position it carried through late 2025. The Bitwise ETF increase, while smaller in absolute terms, reinforces the direction of travel. Both funds provide direct exposure to spot Ethereum, and the filings suggest the bank’s investment team is not merely dabbling but actively adding to the allocation.
The data doesn’t reveal whether the positions are proprietary trading, wealth management assets, or part of a broader treasury strategy. Still, for a regulated bank with $1.9 trillion in assets, the scale of the ETHA holding alone makes it one of the more meaningful institutional ETF disclosures so far this year.
The Wells Fargo filing arrives during a period when the banking lobby is heavily engaged in Washington. Just days before a landmark crypto bill was headed to the Senate floor, banking groups were pushing for last-minute changes that could weaken the legislation, as BlockchainReporter reported in detail. That dual posture — publicly delaying crypto-friendly rules while internally accumulating digital asset exposure — is a tension market watchers have observed before, but the Wells Fargo filing makes it harder to ignore.
It is still unclear whether other major banks will follow with similarly sized ETF allocations, or if Wells Fargo’s move reflects its own internal risk calculus. But the filing forces a question: if a bank of this size is comfortable owning over a million shares of an Ethereum ETF, what does that imply about the durability of regulatory roadblocks elsewhere in the industry?
The Wells Fargo disclosure fits into a larger narrative of traditional finance stepping deeper into on-chain assets. Last week, tokenized real-world assets crossed $20 billion in total value locked, as covered in a recent tokenization roundup. That milestone, combined with the institutional staking moves seen in protocols like Sui — where a Nasdaq-listed company began staking SUI, explored here — paints a picture of cautious but accelerating institutional engagement with crypto beyond simple custody and trading.
Spot Ethereum ETFs themselves have attracted steady flows in recent months, offering traditional portfolio managers a regulated vehicle to gain exposure without handling private keys. Wells Fargo’s decision to upsize its positions suggests it sees a durable role for the asset, not just a short-term trade. It also indirectly validates the ETF wrapper as the preferred route for large institutions that cannot hold underlying crypto directly.
Without accompanying commentary from the bank, the rationale remains speculative. The filing doesn’t separate active conviction from passive rebalancing, and it doesn’t show whether the bank has exposure to other crypto assets through different vehicles. Nor is it known if Wells Fargo plans to adjust these holdings based on near-term price action or regulatory developments. The 13F window offers a snapshot, but not the internal debate that produced the numbers.
The market’s next focus will likely be whether other large banks reveal similar increases when their Q1 filings land, and whether Wells Fargo continues the pattern in the current quarter. For now, the numbers stand on their own — a large American bank growing its Ethereum ETF book at a moment when the rest of the sector remains divided on how — or whether — to engage with digital assets.


