April 25, 2025
11 11 11 AM
Latest Post
Fed Joins OCC, FDIC in Withdrawing Crypto Warnings for U.S. Banks Global Tokenized Real Estate Market Could Explode to $4T by 2035, Deloitte Forecasts El Salvador’s Top Crypto Regulator Meets With U.S. SEC: ‘It Was Very Refreshing’ Senator and Ex-Bridgewater CEO McCormick Invests More in Bitcoin as Bill in Works SoftBank Is Buying Bitcoin Again, After $130M Loss in 2018. Is This Time Different? Strategy Stock Could Climb as New Rival Twenty One Validates Its Bitcoin Strategy Coinbase Introduces Free Conversion for PayPal’s PYUSD as Stablecoin Competition Intensifies Shaq Inks Deal to Settle With FTX Investors Over Boosting Failed Crypto Exchange Stablecoin Legislation Must Ensure Financial Privacy Crypto for Advisors: Crypto — No Longer the Wild West?

Fed Joins OCC, FDIC in Withdrawing Crypto Warnings for U.S. Banks

The Federal Reserve has joined its fellow U.S. banking regulators in deleting its crypto guidance of previous years, including notices that banks should get pre-approvals before they get involved in crypto activity.

Now, all three agencies — including the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. — have joined in reversing those previous policies, leaving crypto matters at banks in the hands of their managers and compliance executives. In the absence of guidance, the banking industry awaits new laws from Congress to define how the digital assets industry should operate in the U.S.

“These actions ensure the Board’s expectations remain aligned with evolving risks and further support innovation in the banking system,” the Fed said in the Thursday statement announcing the change.

Banking supervision of its state member banks is one of the multiple roles performed by the Fed, which is better known for its monetary policy work. The agency’s move on Thursday will specifically remove four pieces of crypto guidance the board signed onto in 2022 and 2023, highlighting risks to banks posed by the sector.

Fed officials “will instead monitor banks’ crypto-asset activities through the normal supervisory process.”

Read More: FDIC Reverses U.S. Crypto Banking Policy That Demanded Prior Approvals

This post was originally published on this site