During the early years of the cryptocurrency market, the industry was dominated by developers, technology enthusiasts, and small startups that believed in the revolutionary potential of blockchain.
Bitcoin was created as an alternative to the traditional financial system.
Ethereum expanded that vision by introducing smart contracts. Emerging exchanges and decentralized projects began building an ecosystem that, for many years, operated largely outside the reach of major financial institutions.
More than a decade later, the landscape has changed.
The launch of Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs, the growth of stablecoins, and the rise of tokenization have attracted some of Wall Street’s biggest names to the sector.
Today, the question is no longer whether institutions will participate in the crypto market, but how much influence they now hold.
The recently released Fortune Crypto 100 ranking provides an interesting snapshot of this transformation.
Who Really Influences the Market Today?
A closer look at the industry’s most influential players makes it clear that the crypto market has entered a new phase.
Companies such as BlackRock, Franklin Templeton, Nasdaq, and Robinhood now share the spotlight with crypto-native giants like Coinbase, Binance, Tether, and several decentralized finance protocols.
BlackRock’s presence among the industry’s leading players may be the clearest symbol of this shift. The asset manager, which oversees trillions of dollars in assets, has become one of the primary gateways for institutional investors seeking exposure to Bitcoin through ETFs.
At the same time, companies such as Tether have secured a strategic position within the industry’s infrastructure. Its stablecoins facilitate billions of dollars in daily transactions and serve as a bridge between traditional markets, exchanges, and decentralized applications.
Platforms such as Coinbase and Binance continue to wield enormous influence by connecting millions of users to digital assets, while DeFi protocols remain key drivers of innovation in areas such as lending, financial settlement, and tokenization.
This suggests that the crypto market no longer has a single center of power. Unlike the early cycles, when influence was concentrated primarily among developers and crypto-native companies, the industry now includes a much broader range of participants.
Today, banks, asset managers, technology companies, stablecoin issuers, exchanges, and decentralized protocols all play a role in shaping the future of the sector.
The Fortune Crypto 100 reflects this evolution perfectly.
Rather than a battle between pioneers and institutions, the ranking highlights an ecosystem that is becoming increasingly integrated with the global financial system.
As a result, the more relevant question may not be who controls the crypto market today, but which organizations will have the greatest ability to shape the next generation of digital financial infrastructure.
