
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) has approved five crypto institutions—Circle, Ripple, BitGo, Fidelity Digital Assets, and Paxos—to obtain nationwide trust bank charters, marking a thorough integration of TradFi and crypto. Federal licensing allows these giants to connect directly to the Federal Reserve’s clearing network, Fedwire, gaining real-time settlement capabilities. Acting OCC Director Jonathan Gould stated that new entrants are beneficial to the competition, diversity, and dynamism of the banking system.
For crypto companies, this national trust bank charter (National Trust Bank Charter) is far more valuable than any previous state-level license. It signifies direct federal oversight and unified regulations, with OCC as the sole regulator, freeing them from the regulatory fragmentation of the 50 U.S. states, each with their own rules. Previously, crypto firms had to apply for Money Transmitter Licenses in each state, facing varying compliance standards and high operational costs, along with legal uncertainties.
More critically, it grants access to the financial “heart.” Nationwide trust banks can connect directly to the Federal Reserve’s clearing systems (like Fedwire), enabling low-cost, instant, efficient fund settlements. Fedwire is the core U.S. funds transfer system, handling trillions of dollars daily between banks. In the past, crypto firms had to access this system indirectly through partner banks, facing delays, high fees, and the risk of service disconnection. Now, they can become direct participants.
Equal rights and responsibilities are another key aspect. With a banking license, these institutions can legally conduct core activities such as digital asset custody and trust services, managing a full range of assets from cryptocurrencies to traditional stocks for clients. This full-licensing capability allows them to offer one-stop asset management services, breaking down the previous barriers that separated crypto and traditional asset custody.
OCC Acting Director Gould explicitly stated that new entrants “benefit the dynamics, competition, and diversity of the banking system.” This clearly signals a regulatory shift in the U.S.: from past scrutiny and containment of crypto innovation to proactively integrating it into a system that is monitorable and collaborative—what’s called “systemic controllability.” This attitude change is not sudden but the result of policy evolutions over the past two years.
The key loosening of U.S. financial regulation reflects a triad of policy, market, and endogenous drivers. First, the breakthrough of spot Bitcoin ETFs in 2024 and the “innovation-friendly” policy tone of the Trump administration in 2025 are direct catalysts. Under guidance issued last November, OCC clarified that banks can incorporate crypto assets and blockchain into core activities, removing the last mental barriers for mass licensing.
Trump’s crypto stance sharply contrasts with previous administrations. Between 2021 and 2023, SEC and other regulators took aggressive enforcement actions against the crypto industry, causing many firms to exit the U.S. or cease serving American customers. But during his 2024 campaign, Trump repeatedly expressed support for crypto innovation and pledged to make the U.S. the “global crypto capital.” This political shift provided political cover for OCC’s more open stance.
Second, the issuance, custody, and clearing of stablecoins worth trillions of dollars have long operated outside the traditional banking system, creating systemic risks like “custody black boxes” and “bank runs.” For institutional capital, trust and transparency akin to banking are prerequisites for entry. Currently, stablecoins’ market cap exceeds $300 billion, with USDC and USDT accounting for over 80%. However, their reserves are held in traditional banks, while issuance and redemption mechanisms are not under federal banking regulation—this split has been viewed as a potential threat to financial stability.
Finally, in fierce market competition, whoever can provide a stable, low-cost fiat-crypto channel controls the flow of traffic. Banking licenses not only mean access to deposit-taking and stable funding sources but also create a systemic moat against market volatility. As Paxos CEO Charles Cascarilla said, this marks a “new phase of federal regulation.”
January 2024: Spot Bitcoin ETF approved, opening the floodgates for institutional capital
November 2024: OCC issues guidance clarifying banks can engage in crypto activities
2025: Trump administration establishes crypto-friendly policy tone
February 2026: Five crypto firms granted nationwide trust bank licenses
The five companies approved this time precisely target key nodes in the digital asset ecosystem, with clear strategic intent. Circle, through First National Digital Currency Bank, elevates USDC’s compliance model to bank-level, aiming for stablecoins to become the digital dollar settlement layer within the Fedwire payment system. If USDC can settle directly via Fedwire, its advantages in cross-border payments and institutional settlements will significantly expand.
Ripple established Ripple National Trust Bank, aiming to leverage its expertise in cross-border payments to resolve XRP’s long-standing compliance issues in global clearing and settlement, using a banking license to fully legitimize its operations. Despite years of legal battles with the SEC, which resulted in partial victories, regulatory uncertainty has limited Ripple’s expansion. The bank license provides a clear compliance status, potentially reopening cooperation with traditional financial institutions.
Paxos and BitGo upgraded from state licenses to nationwide licenses, strengthening their “federal-level” credibility and scope in stablecoin issuance and institutional asset custody. Paxos, issuer of BUSD and PayPal USD, may accelerate the issuance of branded stablecoins through its banking transformation. BitGo, a leader in institutional custody managing hundreds of billions of dollars in crypto assets, will gain legal protections comparable to traditional custodians with a banking license.
Fidelity Digital Assets, representing a traditional asset management giant, signals Wall Street’s recognition that secure, compliant management of trillions of dollars of traditional capital exposure to crypto requires a banking identity. With over $4 trillion under management, Fidelity’s move into crypto custody is a significant endorsement of crypto’s acceptance in traditional finance.
These five institutions are collaboratively drawing a full-chain banking ecosystem blueprint covering “issuance—custody—payment—asset management.” From Circle and Paxos’s stablecoin issuance, to BitGo and Fidelity’s asset custody, and Ripple’s cross-border payments, every critical stage of the digital asset lifecycle is covered by bank-grade institutions.
The core driver of this “banking” wave is the explosive growth of the stablecoin market, now exceeding $300 billion. Yet, despite this massive digital cash volume, most settlement still occurs outside the TradFi banking system. The essence of banking licenses is to create a compliant, direct “official water pipe” to the Fed.
Once integrated, stablecoin settlement speeds could be reduced from T+1 or longer to near-instant, with minimal costs. This would greatly strengthen the position of compliant stablecoins like USDC and could reshape global capital flows. Currently, USDC’s issuance and redemption still require bank cooperation for fiat transfers, which can take hours or days. If Circle, as a federal trust bank, operates directly on Fedwire, this process could be shortened to minutes.
This speed and cost advantage is especially critical for cross-border payments. Traditional international wire transfers via SWIFT can take 3-5 business days and incur high fees. While stablecoins have already improved efficiency, fiat on/off ramps are still constrained by traditional banking systems. Banking-enabled crypto firms could offer truly end-to-end real-time settlement, potentially transforming global trade and remittance markets.
In the future, possessing a banking-grade license will be the foundation for supporting stablecoins, RWA (Real World Assets), and complex DeFi applications. The downstream market worth trillions will unfold from here. RWA, one of the hottest narratives in crypto, involves tokenizing traditional assets like real estate, bonds, and stocks for on-chain trading. But the biggest hurdles are legal compliance and asset custody. Banking-enabled crypto firms can handle both on-chain tokens and off-chain assets, bridging TradFi and DeFi’s last mile.
OCC’s move is not just a “green light” for crypto but may also be a strategic step to extend the dollar’s global settlement dominance into the digital age, laying out critical digital infrastructure in advance. As crypto giants “don their banking robes,” a covert battle over future financial sovereignty has quietly escalated.
However, this integration of TradFi and crypto is not without risks. Banking regulation entails stricter requirements, including capital adequacy, liquidity coverage, stress testing, and consumer protection, which will significantly increase operational costs and potentially constrain innovation. The agility and rapid iteration that crypto firms pride themselves on may be hampered under banking oversight.
Systemic risk is another concern. When crypto institutions become part of the banking system, their failures could trigger contagion in traditional finance. Conversely, a crisis in traditional banks could propagate into crypto via clearing networks. This deep integration creates new systemic risk transmission pathways.
The compromise of decentralization is also debated. Crypto’s original goal was to bypass traditional intermediaries, but banking integration reintroduces centralized institutions. Some crypto purists see this as a betrayal of core decentralization values, while pragmatists argue that integration with TradFi is necessary for large-scale adoption.
Competitive dynamics will also shift. The five licensed institutions will enjoy significant first-mover advantages and regulatory moats, raising barriers for new entrants. This could lead to oligopolies in crypto banking, creating tension with the original ideals of decentralization and open competition.
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