Goldman Sachs has formally kicked off the cryptocurrency trading era on Wall Street.
An internal memo reveals that the bank informed its markets personnel on Thursday that a newly created cryptocurrency trading desk had successfully traded two kinds of bitcoin-linked derivatives.
The crypto team exists within the firm’s global currencies and emerging markets trading team, reporting to Goldman partner Rajesh Venkataramani, who authored the memo, and is part of the bank’s overall digital assets effort led by Mathew McDermott.
Goldman Sachs, a dominant global investment bank for trading fixed income and equities, had been mulling the creation of a bitcoin trading desk since at least 2017.
The firm tabled those plans initially and restarted the crypto trading team in March, PageOne reported earlier this year.
The Thursday memo was the first time New York-based Goldman officially acknowledged its involvement in crytpo-currency trading.
Under CEO David Solomon, Goldman seeks to broaden its market presence by “selectively onboarding” crypto trading institutions to expand offerings, the bank said.
The firm also said it launched a new software platform this week that provides the latest cryptocurrency prices and news for clients.
Banks, including Goldman and rival Morgan Stanley, had announced plans to offer bitcoin investments to rich clients in their wealth management divisions, but have mostly stayed away from the volatile asset in their Wall Street trading operations.
Traders at firms including JPMorgan Chase have been asking managers when they could begin handling bitcoin, CNBC has reported.
The derivatives it traded, bitcoin futures and non-deliverable forwards, are ways to wager on the price of bitcoin.
The contracts are settled in cash and don’t require that Goldman deals with actual bitcoin, called “physical bitcoin” in the industry, because the bank isn’t yet in a position to do so, Venkataraman noted in the memo.