Major banking associations have sharply criticized the OCC's December 12 conditional approvals for national trust bank charters to crypto firms like Ripple, Fidelity, Paxos, BitGo, and Circle, citing regulatory arbitrage, absent FDIC insurance, and threats to systemic stability amid consumer confusion.
Following the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency's (OCC) conditional approvals on December 12, 2025, for five cryptocurrency companies to operate as national trust banks—Ripple, Fidelity Digital Assets, Paxos, BitGo, and Circle—leading banking coalitions have issued strong warnings.
These groups argue the charters enable regulatory arbitrage by allowing crypto firms to sidestep stricter state or traditional banking rules while gaining bank-like status for custody and asset management, without deposit-taking or lending powers. Critically absent is FDIC deposit insurance, a cornerstone of consumer trust in conventional banks, potentially misleading the public and creating an uneven competitive field.
Drawing parallels to the 2008 financial crisis, the associations caution that such gaps could concentrate risks, foster interconnected failures, and amplify vulnerabilities during market downturns. They urge either full alignment with traditional bank standards or separate categorization without 'bank' terminology to avoid confusion.
The OCC positions the charters as a bridge for crypto innovation into federal frameworks, with firms required to secure capital and infrastructure within 18 months for full activation. This clash underscores tensions in integrating digital assets into U.S. finance, pitting innovation against safeguards.