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Charles Schwab Crypto Allocation Guide: What Investors Need to Know in 2026
TLDR
Charles Schwab, the largest publicly traded U.S. brokerage managing over $12 trillion in client assets, has published a research report on how investors should think about adding crypto to their portfolios.
The firm says there is no single “correct” allocation. Instead, the right amount depends on each investor’s goals, risk tolerance, and outlook.
Schwab’s white paper, written by Jim Ferraioli, director of digital currencies research at the Schwab Center for Financial Research, outlines two main frameworks for crypto allocation.
The first is a return-based approach. It looks at expected returns, volatility, and how crypto correlates with other assets like stocks and bonds.
Under this approach, if an investor expects Bitcoin to return 15% per year, a conservative portfolio might hold around 1%, a moderate portfolio around 6.6%, and an aggressive portfolio around 8.8%.
For Ethereum, which is more volatile, those numbers are smaller. Conservative portfolios could hold around 0.1%, moderate around 2%, and aggressive around 2.5%.
Schwab notes that if expected returns fall below 10%, neither Bitcoin nor Ethereum may justify any allocation at all, even for aggressive investors.
How Much Risk Does Crypto Actually Add?
The second framework is a risk-based approach. Instead of focusing on expected returns, it asks how much of the portfolio’s total risk comes from crypto.
In a conservative portfolio, a 1.2% allocation to Bitcoin can already represent 10% of total portfolio risk. That ratio highlights how quickly crypto can dominate a portfolio’s risk profile even at small weights.
Schwab reports that Bitcoin has shown annualized volatility of around 72% and drawdowns of more than 70%. Ethereum has been even more volatile, with nearly 98% annualized volatility and drawdowns close to 88%.
The firm stresses that as crypto weightings increase, portfolio performance becomes increasingly tied to how crypto performs, not the broader portfolio.
Schwab does acknowledge that crypto can offer some diversification benefits when added to a mix of traditional investments.
However, the firm is clear that digital assets remain speculative. They are not backed by central banks and carry liquidity, custody, and fraud risks that traditional assets do not.
Schwab Moves Into Direct Crypto Trading
The report comes as Schwab takes steps to offer direct crypto access to clients.
The firm has opened a waitlist for “Schwab Crypto,” a new account type that will let clients buy and sell Bitcoin and Ethereum directly through its platform.
The offering is being developed under Charles Schwab Premier Bank and is pending regulatory approval.
If approved, it would put Schwab in more direct competition with platforms like Coinbase and Robinhood.
Currently, Schwab offers crypto exposure through exchange-traded products, crypto-related stocks, and futures for approved accounts.
The firm had previously dismissed crypto as “purely speculative” back in 2019, and has gradually shifted its position since then.