Vanguard posted a Head of Digital Assets role on July 6 within its Personal Wealth division. The position covers tokenization, stablecoins, custody, settlement, governance, compliance, and client-facing capabilities. The move follows Vanguard's December 2025 decision to allow clients to trade third-party cryptocurrency ETFs tracking bitcoin, ether, XRP, and solana. Vanguard manages about $12 trillion in global assets under management as of Nov. 30, 2025, and the role would define how the firm evaluates, prioritizes, develops, and implements digital asset capabilities, products, and operating models.
The July 6 job posting places digital assets inside a client-facing wealth division, giving the role strategic and operational weight. The Head of Digital Assets would define how Vanguard evaluates, prioritizes, develops, and implements capabilities, products, and operating models. The role spans Dallas, Scottsdale, Charlotte, and Malvern under a hybrid model.
The posting describes a senior leader who would define Vanguard's perspective, build a multiyear roadmap, and decide where the firm should build, partner, or hold back. Vanguard lists tokenization, stablecoins, wallets, custody models, settlement, and blockchain-enabled operating models as required areas of knowledge. The executive would connect those topics to brokerage, advice, cash, investment products, technology platforms, and governance forums.
Vanguard's job posting for Head of Digital Assets in the Personal Wealth division. Source: Vanguard.
The hiring initiative follows Vanguard's December 2025 brokerage shift, when the firm began allowing clients to trade certain third-party cryptocurrency exchange-traded funds and mutual funds. Those offerings included funds tracking bitcoin, ether, XRP, and solana, giving Vanguard clients indirect exposure to digital assets through its platform.
That shift contrasted with Vanguard's earlier skepticism. In December 2024, Vanguard said bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies were speculative investments that had "no role in long-term investment portfolios." The new role is notable, though the posting does not say Vanguard has changed its investment view on crypto.
Brokerage clients can now invest in externally managed crypto funds, but Vanguard has not outlined a broader framework for digital assets across advisory services, custody models, and operations. The Head of Digital Assets role would align client access with infrastructure, governance, and regulatory requirements.
Vanguard says the executive will assess digital asset opportunities for self-directed, advice, and wealth clients. That includes access models, experience design, servicing, education, pricing, and value proposition. The posting does not name a specific token, fund, exchange service, or trading product.
The operating model requirements show the work ahead. Vanguard expects planning around onboarding, servicing, custody, settlement, reconciliations, reporting, exception management, resiliency, and third-party integration. Risk and compliance would also shape the mandate from the outset.
What did Vanguard post on July 6?
Vanguard posted a Head of Digital Assets role on July 6 within its Personal Wealth division. The position covers tokenization, stablecoins, custody, settlement, governance, compliance, and client-facing capabilities across Dallas, Scottsdale, Charlotte, and Malvern under a hybrid model.
Why did Vanguard create a Head of Digital Assets role?
The role follows Vanguard's December 2025 decision to allow clients to trade third-party cryptocurrency ETFs tracking bitcoin, ether, XRP, and solana. The executive would align client access with infrastructure, governance, and regulatory requirements, and define how Vanguard evaluates, prioritizes, develops, and implements digital asset capabilities.
What was Vanguard's stance on crypto in December 2024?
In December 2024, Vanguard said bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies were speculative investments that had "no role in long-term investment portfolios." The firm shifted its brokerage policy in December 2025 to allow clients to trade certain third-party crypto ETFs and mutual funds.
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