Fidelity CEO Declares: ’I Own Bitcoin’ – Here’s Why It’s Crypto’s Gold Standard
Fidelity's CEO just made his position crystal clear—he's a Bitcoin holder. And he's not shy about why he thinks it stands alone at the top.
The Ultimate Store of Value
Forget the noise. The argument here cuts straight to Bitcoin's core proposition: digital scarcity. It's not about payments or smart contracts—it's about a verifiably limited asset in an era of endless money printing. A hard cap on supply that no central committee can vote to change.
Bypassing the Traditional Gatekeepers
This isn't just another asset class. It's a system that operates 24/7, settles globally without intermediaries, and whose ledger is public. It creates a form of property rights that exist outside any single nation's financial infrastructure—a feature that's looking less like a novelty and more like a necessity.
The Institutional Seal of Approval
When the head of a trillion-dollar asset manager stakes a personal and professional claim on Bitcoin, it sends a signal. It moves the conversation from the fringe of internet forums to the center of boardroom strategy. It’s a nod to the growing recognition that digital, native assets are here to stay.
Of course, Wall Street has a knack for embracing things it once mocked—right after figuring out how to slap a hefty management fee on them. But this endorsement underscores a pivotal shift. Bitcoin isn't waiting for permission anymore. It's setting the benchmark.
Fidelity CEO Abigail Johnson just offered one of her most detailed looks yet at how the firm got into Bitcoin and why she still backs it today.
In a recent conversation at the Founders Summit with a16z crypto COO Anthony Albanese, she walked through how Fidelity ended up years ahead of the rest of traditional finance.
How Fidelity Got Into Crypto
Johnson says Fidelity’s crypto story began with “a learning curiosity thing,” not a corporate strategy.
Around 2013, a small internal group met regularly to figure out what bitcoin even was and whether it might eventually reshape parts of the business. They generated 52 possible use cases. Almost all failed. The only one that stuck was accepting Bitcoin for charitable donations.
That small win gave Fidelity credibility inside the crypto community and opened the door for deeper involvement.
The $200K Mining Bet That Paid Off Big
One of the most surprising pieces Johnson shared was how early Fidelity started mining. She pushed through a $200,000 Antminer purchase that many inside the company tried to shut down.
It ended up becoming “probably the highest single highest IRR business that we’ve had.”
This put Fidelity directly into Bitcoin’s technical stack, giving the firm hands-on experience with wallets, security, and infrastructure long before the rest of Wall Street showed interest.
Johnson on Bitcoin: ‘I Own Bitcoin. I Kind of Like Bitcoin.’
On her personal position, Johnson was clear: “I don’t own tons of coins, but I own Bitcoin.” She called BTC “the Gold standard… in the crypto world,” and said it will continue to play a role in people’s savings plans.
From Experiments to a Real Business
That early exploration eventually led Fidelity to formal crypto custody, driven by advisors who needed secure ways to help clients hold and pass down Bitcoin.
Today, crypto touches multiple parts of the company, from asset management to R&D. Johnson believes the direction is set: there is “zero chance that it’s not happening because it is happening.”