crypto dollars countdown begins

Federal regulators have dramatically reversed course on crypto, yanking restrictive policies and clearing the path for banks to plunge into digital dollars. The shift comes after a flurry of regulatory changes, including the OCC’s Interpretive Letters 1186 and 1188, which now let national banks hold crypto on their balance sheets.

No more asking permission. The FDIC tossed out FIL-16-2022, eliminating the requirement for banks to notify them before dabbling in crypto. These activities now include permissible crypto services like acting as custodians and maintaining stablecoin reserves. Meanwhile, the Fed scrapped its 2023 guidance for non-FDIC banks. Coordinated much?

Bank crypto operations just got a whole lot easier. Joint agency statements in 2025 replaced earlier restrictions from 2022-2023. Translation: the government’s decided crypto isn’t so scary after all. The SEC Chair Paul Atkins emphasized that clear regulations for crypto asset trading are a regulatory priority in the SEC’s Spring 2025 Regulatory Agenda. The state-level picture remains a patchwork, though. Some states welcome crypto with open arms; others treat it like radioactive waste.

Regulators claim they’re just “aligning expectations with evolving risks” and “supporting innovation.” Sure. But they’re still watching. Banks need proper risk assessments before jumping into crypto-dollar operations. And supervisors retain their examination authority—they’re just not making banks jump through hoops first.

What can banks actually do now? Quite a bit. They can custody crypto assets for customers, act as stablecoin issuance agents, run nodes, and participate in blockchain-based payment systems. They can even hold crypto for operational needs or test new platforms. Market making? That’s on the table too. Banks implementing tiered stop-loss orders can protect their institutional investments from the extreme volatility that typically accompanies cryptocurrency markets.

Not everyone at the top is thrilled. Some governors champion innovation pathways while others warn of regulatory arbitrage and financial stability risks. It’s a mixed bag of enthusiasm and caution.

Banks face serious considerations though—credit, liquidity, and market-price exposures from holding crypto inventories aren’t trivial risks. The regulators have opened the door, but they haven’t promised to catch anyone who falls.

The crypto clock is ticking. Banks better get their digital dollars in a row before 2026 rolls around. Bitcoin’s notorious volatility could throw a serious curveball.

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