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FDIC Clears Path for Bank Crypto Activities Without Prior Approval
2025-03-30 19:07:33 Reading

 

Banks can engage in cryptocurrency and other legally permitted activities without seeking prior regulatory approval, so long as they manage risks appropriately, The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation announced Friday.

The policy change rescinds a 2022 requirement that mandated FDIC-supervised institutions notify the agency before engaging in crypto-related activities. Under the new guidance, banks can offer services involving digital assets without the agency's advance permission.

"With today's action, the FDIC is turning the page on the flawed approach of the past three years," FDIC Acting Chairman Travis Hill said in a statement. "I expect this to be one of several steps the FDIC will take to lay out a new approach for how banks can engage in crypto and blockchain-related activities in accordance with safety and soundness standards."

The move aligns with similar actions by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, which earlier this month reaffirmed that national banks can engage in certain crypto activities, including custody services and stablecoin transactions.

This regulatory shift marks a stark departure from the Biden administration's approach to cryptocurrency and banking relationships. Documents released earlier this year through Freedom of Information Act requests showed the FDIC frequently deterred banks from offering crypto-related services, critics claimed.

The previous regulatory stance had drawn criticism from lawmakers who started investigations into what some called "Operation Chokepoint 2.0," a reference to an Obama-era initiative that targeted certain industries including firearms dealers and payday lenders. Critics claimed the Biden administration had similarly targeted the cryptocurrency industry through banking restrictions.

In its new Financial Institution Letter (FIL-7-2025), the FDIC clarified that "FDIC-supervised institutions may engage in permissible crypto-related activities without receiving prior FDIC approval."

The reversal follows months of pressure from cryptocurrency advocates and completes a significant pivot in federal banking policy. Industry representatives had accused regulators of using informal pressure tactics, including concerns about "reputational risk," to discourage banks from serving cryptocurrency businesses.

  American Bankers Association President and CEO Rob Nichols praised the decision. "We welcome FDIC’s new guidance allowing supervised institutions to engage in permissible crypto-related activities without receiving prior FDIC approval,” he said in an official statement. “America’s banks are actively evaluating ways to compete safely and responsibly across the financial services ecosystem, and this type of regulatory clarity is critical to enhancing innovation in the space."

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