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Bitcoin Soars Towards Six-Figure Milestone as Kraken Secures Landmark Federal Endorsement

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Bitcoin Soars Towards Six-Figure Milestone as Kraken Secures Landmark Federal Endorsement

"The Federal Reserve officially approves Kraken Financial as the first digital asset bank with direct access to the United States' payment systems," the popular Bitcoin curation account @DocumentingBTC posted on X this week, racking up over 3,000 likes. The post set off a wave of commentary about what it means when a crypto company gets the same kind of Fed access that traditional banks have guarded for decades.

Bitcoin is trading near $70,000. Some market watchers think the Kraken news is exactly the kind of institutional plumbing upgrade that could push prices toward $100,000.

What Happened To Kraken

The Kansas City Fed approved Kraken Financial, a Wyoming-chartered Special Purpose Depository Institution, for a limited-purpose Federal Reserve master account on March 4. The term is one year. The access is restricted. But the symbolism is hard to miss.

Kraken Co-CEO Arjun Sethi told Fortune that Kraken went through Wyoming to get a Special Purpose Depository Institution charter rather than the OCC route other crypto firms have tried. Kraken's head of policy Jonathan Jachym told Reuters the approval is "a great testament to regulatory rigor and cooperation," adding that it "promotes principles of both safety and soundness, and innovation." The account lets Kraken hold balances at the Fed and settle in U.S. dollars on Fedwire, bypassing the correspondent banks that crypto firms have relied on for years.

The reaction on X was not universally positive. "ICBA and 42 state banking associations objected to the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City's approval of a master account for Kraken Financial," the Independent Community Bankers of America posted on their official account. Representative Maxine Waters, the ranking Democrat on the House Financial Services Committee, demanded the Kansas City Fed explain its legal authority for the decision.

One anonymous trader on X captured the skeptics' view: "Kraken's Fed approval... isn't pure adoption; it's assimilation. Don't mistake integration for decentralization."

Why It Matters For Bitcoin's Price

The Kraken news lands at a moment when institutional money is already flowing back into bitcoin. Spot bitcoin ETFs pulled in $789 million last week, the highest weekly total since February. BlackRock continues to lead those flows.

Charles Schwab, which serves roughly 39 million brokerage clients, recently published a risk-sizing framework showing that an aggressive portfolio model could hold up to 8.8% in bitcoin under certain return assumptions. Schwab stopped short of calling it a recommendation, but the signal caught attention across crypto X. Pete Rizzo, the Bitcoin historian and former CoinDesk editor, posted that "$11 trillion Schwab just told 40 million clients to add bitcoin to their portfolios," a characterization that got over 2,000 likes even if it overstated what Schwab actually said.

Kevin Olsen, a payments industry educator who runs the Payments Professor YouTube channel, analyzed the Kraken approval in a video and predicted this is "merely the first of many approvals, signaling a permanent shift in how electronic banking and crypto institutions interact with sovereign financial rails."

Bitcoin has gained about 3% this week, bouncing between $70,300 and $73,200. The $75,000 level is the next test.

The Bull Case

Pierre Rochard, CEO of Bitcoin Bond Company and a longtime Bitcoin advocate, put it bluntly on X: "No four-year halving cycle has ever had a consistent bid from institutional and sovereign wealth quite like what we're seeing in 2026." His argument is that the old four-year boom-bust pattern is breaking because institutions are now permanent buyers, not tourists.

The numbers back him up. Morgan Stanley launched its own low-fee bitcoin ETF (MSBT) on April 8, charging just 0.14%. "Morgan Stanley just handed Bitcoin to 16,000 wealth advisors managing $6.2 trillion in client assets," posted Garry Krug, head of BTC strategy at aifinyo. "Their recommended allocation for growth portfolios: 2-4%."

Wall Street price targets for year-end 2026 are stacking up. Standard Chartered's Geoff Kendrick is at $100,000. TD Cowen has a $140,000 target tied to bitcoin treasury companies. Bernstein is at $150,000. Tom Lee at Fundstrat has floated $200,000 to $250,000. The Kraken approval feeds directly into every one of these theses because it removes a layer of friction between institutional dollars and the crypto ecosystem.

The Bear Case

The one-year term on Kraken's account tells you something. The Fed is treating this as a trial, not a verdict.

"TD Cowen has cut its Strategy price target by 20.5% to $350, projecting the company's Bitcoin gains will fall to $7.87 billion in 2026 from $10.17 billion in 2025," CoinMarketCap reported. That is the same TD Cowen with a $140,000 bitcoin target cutting its bet on the biggest corporate bitcoin holder. Mixed signals, to say the least.

Not everyone on X is buying the institutional narrative either. "Expecting under $50K by November 2026," one trader posted, arguing that short-term rallies to $80,000 or $90,000 will give way to a deeper correction. Another anonymous account pegged their year-end target at $52,500, citing historical pattern analysis.

Then there is the political risk. Waters' investigation could lead to legislation restricting crypto companies from accessing Fed payment systems. The ICBA has 42 state banking associations backing its opposition. If Congress moves to pull the plug on Kraken's experiment, the bullish narrative flips overnight.

What To Watch Next For Bitcoin Price

The big question is whether Kraken stays alone or other firms follow. Jachym has said the approval shows the regulatory path exists for any well-capitalized digital asset company willing to go through the process.

Bitcoin sitting at $70,000 with that $75,000 barrier overhead. A break through on heavy volume, combined with continued ETF inflows and more broker launches like Morgan Stanley's MSBT, would be the kind of technical confirmation that turns Wall Street's $100,000-plus targets from speculation into consensus.