February 5, 2025
Trump's FDIC Chief Rethinks Crypto Guidance as U.S. Senators Probe Debanking thumbnail
Business

Trump’s FDIC Chief Rethinks Crypto Guidance as U.S. Senators Probe Debanking

FDIC Acting Chairman Travis Hill said the agency is overhauling its crypto approach, just as U.S. senators examined regulators keeping banks out of crypto.”, — write: www.coindesk.com

FDIC Acting Chairman Travis Hill said the agency is overhauling its crypto approach, just as U.S. senators examined regulators keeping banks out of crypto.Updated Feb 5, 2025, 6:00 p.m. UTCPublished Feb 5, 2025, 5:43 p.m. UTC

As U.S. senators prepared to gather for a hearing about U.S. debanking of crypto clients, the interim chief of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. said his agency is overhauling its digital assets supervision and revealed more correspondence on Wednesday in which FDIC officials steered banks away from cryptocurrency business.

Travis Hill, the acting FDIC chairman tapped by President Donald Trump, has thrown open more of the agency’s past documents and said the U.S. banking regulator will be reconsidering its previous crypto guidance that deliberately kept banks an arm’s length away from what had been seen as the unregulated volatility of crypto. The past letters between the FDIC and bank have been the focus of a court Freedom of Information Act battle between Coinbase and the agency, in which the courts had directed the regulator to share more information.

Meanwhile, Hill said the FDIC will be “providing a pathway for institutions to engage in crypto- and blockchain-related activities while still adhering to safety and soundness principles,” according to a statement issued before the start of a Wednesday hearing in the Senate Banking Committee on this topic.

“I directed staff to conduct a comprehensive review of all supervisory communications with banks that sought to offer crypto-related products or services,” he said. “While this review remains underway, we are releasing a large batch of documents today, in advance of a court-ordered deadline of Friday.”

Hill, who will run the FDIC until Trump puts forward a permanent candidate, characterized the agency as deliberately making it impossible for banks to handle crypto business.

“Requests from these banks were almost universally met with resistance, ranging from repeated requests for further information, to multi-month periods of silence as institutions waited for responses, to directives from supervisors to pause, suspend, or refrain from expanding all crypto- or blockchain-related activity,” he said.

Read More: U.S. Banking Should Ease Path for Crypto, Republican Taking Reins at FDIC Suggests

When the Senate hearing got underway, Chairman Tim Scott, a South Carolina Republican, called the situation at the FDIC a “disgusting and disheartening picture of abuse” and praised Hill’s actions.

At the hearing, Nathan McCauley, the co-founder and CEO of federally chartered crypto bank Anchorage Digital, shared his account of Anchorage being severed from banking relationships because of regulatory pressure.

“To say this is pervasive is an understatement,” he told the senators in his testimony. “It’s been across the entire industry, everybody has dealt with this.”

He called it so common that “it became background noise” in which it was “just assumed that if you were a crypto company, you would have trouble getting bank services.”

He contended that the pressure from regulators ran counter to what U.S. bankers actually wanted to do in the digital assets sector.

“All of the big banks wanted to work with crypto and were scared away from it by the regulatory apparatus,” he said. 

Senator Elizabeth Warren, the committee’s ranking Democrat, sought to highlight the other segments of the U.S. population that are routinely blocked from banking services. But she did agree with McCauley’s central point.

“I don’t think for a second that you should be locked out of our banking system,” she said. “In many cases, it is wrong for banks to close accounts and threaten your ability to make payroll or pay rent on time without even providing an explanation, so long as you are following the law.”

The congressional review of debanking will continue on Thursday with a House Financial Services Committee hearing with a similar agenda. And that committee’s crypto interest will continue next week with a February 11 hearing entitled “A Golden Age of Digital Assets: Charting a Path Forward.”

Read More: Trump’s Crypto Czar Sacks Says ‘Golden Age’ Coming

UPDATE (February 5, 2025, 18:00 UTC): Adds information on further congressional hearings planned.

Jesse HamiltonJesse Hamilton is CoinDesk’s deputy managing editor on the Global Policy and Regulation team, based in Washington, D.C. Before joining CoinDesk in 2022, he worked for more than a decade covering Wall Street regulation at Bloomberg News and Businessweek, writing about the early whisperings among federal agencies trying to decide what to do about crypto. He’s won several national honors in his reporting career, including from his time as a war correspondent in Iraq and as a police reporter for newspapers. Jesse is a graduate of Western Washington University, where he studied journalism and history. He has no crypto holdings.

X icon

Jesse Hamilton

Related posts

Bitcoin Extends Losses to Below $97K Following David Sacks Press Conference

coindesk com

Blockstream Opens New Office in Tokyo as It Expands in Asia

coindesk com

British Labor sell modern warships for funny money: they consider “betrayal”

unian ua

Leave a Comment

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Accept Read More