DEV Community

Cover image for US Federal Review Unlocks Fintech Access to Bank Charters & Crypto
Constantine Manko
Constantine Manko

Posted on

US Federal Review Unlocks Fintech Access to Bank Charters & Crypto

Cover: US Federal Review to Unlock Fintech Access to Bank Charters and Crypto Integration

US Federal Review to Unlock Fintech Access to Bank Charters and Crypto Integration

The Biden administration has mandated a 90-day review for US federal financial regulators to reassess and update rules that currently limit fintech firms' partnerships with federally regulated financial institutions. This initiative targets the regulatory friction that prevents fintechs from aligning with credit unions, broker-dealers, and investment advisers, which can complicate or block their access to federal payment services and licenses.

What’s Driving This Regulatory Review?

The executive order explicitly recognizes the United States’ status as a global leader in financial innovation, attributing much of this to the rapid growth of fintech firms and emerging digital asset technologies. To sustain and expand this innovation, federal regulations must evolve:

“To foster this financial innovation, the federal government must update regulations to allow integration of digital assets and innovative technology into traditional financial services and payment systems.”

This clearly sets a federal priority to blend cutting-edge fintech capabilities—particularly those related to digital assets—with longstanding financial infrastructures.

Which Agencies and Licenses Are Involved?

The heads of each US federal financial regulator are tasked with reviewing a broad range of regulatory instruments:

  • Regulations
  • Orders
  • Guidance documents
  • No-action letters

Their mission is twofold. First, to identify which existing policies might be unintentionally barring fintech firms from meaningful collaborations with federally regulated institutions. Second, to streamline the licensing process for:

  • Bank charters
  • Credit union charters
  • Deposit or share insurance
  • Other federal licenses relevant to fintechs

One specific enablement in focus is the national bank trust charter, which allows institutions to offer fiduciary services such as trust management, custody, and secure asset storage. This charter is particularly relevant for crypto-asset companies aiming to bridge traditional finance and blockchain ecosystems.

Recent Moves Toward Crypto-Friendly Federal Charters

Concrete progress toward integrating crypto services into regulated financial institutions is evident. In December, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC):

  • Conditionally approved five crypto-related national trust bank applications.
  • Approvals included entities like First National Digital Currency Bank, Ripple, BitGo, Fidelity Digital Assets, and Paxos.

These approvals underscore the pragmatic direction regulators are taking—exploring ways to anchor crypto firms within federally supervised banking frameworks.

Aspect Current State Potential Improvements
Fintech partnerships Limited by regulatory complexity and bans Regulatory reviews seek to remove bans
Licensing process Fragmented across multiple regulations Streamlined review for charters and licenses
Crypto integration Emerging with conditional OCC charters Broader federal acceptance anticipated
Fiduciary activities through charter National bank trust charter offers trust, custody Expansion to support fintech and crypto manage assets

Implications for Fintech and Crypto Developers

For developers and CTOs in crypto and fintech startups, these regulatory moves signal a future with firmer legal footing for partnering with traditional banks and obtaining essential federal charters. The pending regulatory review should reduce barriers that previously caused crypto debanking, a phenomenon now understood largely as the effect of government pressure rather than self-imposed banking policies.

One should anticipate evolving compliance requirements as federal regulators update their guidance, no-action letters, and licensing criteria. This process will likely impose technical and operational demands on fintech platforms, emphasizing transparency, custody standards, and risk management to satisfy fiduciary charters.

Security Insight on Regulatory Evolution

Regulatory modernization in fintech is like upgrading the security protocols of a legacy system. Without clear, updated guardrails, innovation flounders amid ambiguity and risk. Lifting outdated constraints on crypto and fintech charters empowers engineers to build compliant yet flexible systems that marry legacy trust models with decentralized innovation.

In practice, the review's success hinges on translating these regulatory updates into precise, testable compliance frameworks that your smart contracts, custodial mechanisms, and integration layers can reliably implement.


These regulatory developments present a pivotal moment for fintech and crypto product teams looking to integrate into the US financial infrastructure. The team I work with at the security firm where I’m embedded keeps a close eye on such policy shifts, as they critically inform audit scopes and compliance alignments for new financial applications. Staying ahead means designing systems capable of adapting swiftly to the legal frameworks that govern fiduciary responsibilities and asset custody in this evolving landscape.

For in-depth insights into how emerging regulations map to technical requirements, keep tracking the audit and research expertise found at https://soken.dev/.

Top comments (0)