The Federal Reserve said Thursday evening it will no longer obligate member banks to provide advance
The Federal Reserve said Thursday evening it will no longer obligate member banks to provide advanced notice of crypto and stablecoin-related ventures, and will instead monitor engagement with digital assets like it would any other banking activities.
The announcement comes weeks after parallel moves by the FDIC and Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, two other key federal banking regulators. Those agencies similarly clarified that banks are legally permitted to engage in crypto-related activities and no longer required to receive explicit permission from regulators to do so.
In January 2023, in the wake of FTXs historic collapse, the three aforementioned agencies jointly issued guidance strongly discouraging American member banks from engaging with crypto, and ordering them to provide notice of any such intention.
“[T]he agencies believe that issuing or holding as principal crypto-assets that are issued, stored, or transferred on an open, public, and/or decentralized network, or similar system is highly likely to be inconsistent with safe and sound banking practices,” the joint statement said at the time.
That letter is now also rescinded, per todays announcement.
In the months and years following the institution of said crypto-skeptical banking policies, numerous industry leaders claimed they and their businesses were denied traditional banking services based on their association with the crypto industry alone. Since retaking office, President Donald Trump has made undoing this alleged anti-crypto banking discrimination, dubbed “Operation Chokepoint 2.0,” a top priority.
Tonight, the Federal Reserve officially joined the FDIC and OCC in making a formal shift away from such Biden-era digital asset policies.
In crypto circles, though, some anxiety persisted until today that the Fed would resist making this pivot. The Fed board currently consists of four Democrats and three Republicans, and Fed chair Jerome Powell has shown himself in recent weeks to be willing to act independently of the presidents wishes.
One crypto banking advocate who requested anonymity in order to speak candidly told Decrypt they had worried the Fed‘s Democratic majority, along with Powell, would drag its feet in rescinding Biden-era crypto policies, or potentially resist the move altogether. Today’s announcement shows the central bank is “moving in the right direction,” they said.
Today‘s announcement stops short, though, of officially changing the Fed’s policies when it comes to granting crypto-focused banks master accounts, which grant Fed members access to the central banks services. Master accounts are crucial for a bank to meaningfully serve customers nationwide. For years, the Fed has resisted granting any such accounts to crypto-focused banks like Custodia and Kraken Financial.
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