Kraken receives first Fed master account for crypto firm

The Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City has granted Kraken Financial a limited-purpose master account, marking the first time a cryptocurrency firm gains direct access to the central bank's payment system. This approval allows Kraken to settle U.S. dollar transactions on Fedwire without intermediaries. The move comes amid a shifting regulatory landscape under the Trump administration but draws criticism from banking trade groups over potential risks.

On Wednesday, the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City approved a limited-purpose master account for Kraken Financial, a Wyoming-chartered special-purpose depository institution (SPDI) operated by Payward Ventures. This decision makes Kraken the first digital asset bank in U.S. history to connect directly to the Federal Reserve's payment infrastructure, including Fedwire. The account, granted for an initial one-year term, enables Kraken to move funds more efficiently, reducing costs and dependencies on correspondent banks.

Kraken co-CEO Arjun Sethi described the milestone in a statement: “This milestone marks the convergence of crypto infrastructure and sovereign financial rails. With a Federal Reserve master account, we can operate not as a peripheral participant in the U.S. banking system, but as a directly connected financial institution.” Sethi added that the full-reserve model of the SPDI charter provides a resilient foundation, allowing direct settlement on Fedwire and integration of regulated fiat liquidity into digital asset markets.

Kansas City Fed President Jeff Schmid noted that “the payments landscape is actively evolving,” emphasizing the priority of maintaining the integrity and stability of the U.S. payments system. The approval follows over five years of regulatory engagement since Kraken's application in October 2020 and aligns with recent pro-crypto developments, including the passage of the Genius Act and the installation of supportive federal regulators during the second Trump administration.

However, banking trade groups expressed strong concerns. Brooke Ybarra, senior vice president of innovation and strategy at the American Bankers Association, stated: “With so many related issues still unsettled, including final GENIUS Act rules and the development of a ‘skinny’ master account framework, we have serious questions about why regulators are granting access... This action puts the cart so far ahead, that the horse will never be able to catch up.”

Paige Pidano Paridon, co-head of regulatory affairs at the Bank Policy Institute, criticized the move for ignoring public comments on the 'skinny' account framework, which offers limited access without interest on balances, daylight overdrafts, or discount window privileges. She highlighted risks of illicit finance and systemic instability from granting uninsured firms access before final rules.

The approval contrasts with the experience of Custodia Bank, another Wyoming-chartered crypto firm that applied in the same month but was denied in early 2023, leading to ongoing litigation. Kraken, classified under the Fed's Tier 3 for strictest review, plans a phased rollout focused on institutional clients.

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Illustration depicting Zerohash executives submitting OCC national trust bank charter application amid crypto firm surge, with Chicago skyline and digital asset symbols.
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Zerohash applies for OCC national trust bank charter amid surge in crypto applications

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Chicago-based crypto infrastructure provider Zerohash filed for a national trust bank charter from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency on March 4, 2026, becoming the eleventh company to do so in 83 days. The move, amid a wave of similar applications from firms like Circle, Ripple, and Coinbase, aims to enable nationwide custody of digital assets, fiat, staking, and stablecoin services, bypassing state licenses.

Industry stakeholders have submitted initial feedback on the Federal Reserve's proposed 'skinny' master accounts, with fintech and cryptocurrency groups arguing the framework is too restrictive. Banking trade groups, meanwhile, request an extension of the public comment period. The proposal, aimed at spurring payments innovation, was introduced by Fed Governor Christopher Waller in mid-October.

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Kraken, a major cryptocurrency exchange, has pledged to fund savings accounts for every child born in Wyoming in 2026 as part of President Donald Trump's initiative. The move highlights the exchange's ties to the state where it is headquartered and the broader alignment between crypto firms and political figures. Experts view it as a strategic effort to build goodwill amid growing political involvement in the industry.

Major banks are turning to the Ethereum blockchain for projects involving tokenized deposits and cross-border payments, driven by a more favorable regulatory environment. Institutions like JPMorgan Chase, Citi and Custodia Bank have developed applications on Ethereum and its Layer-2 networks. This resurgence follows earlier efforts in the 2010s that largely stalled due to technical and investment challenges.

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The cryptocurrency industry is shifting from its lawless origins toward regulated integration with traditional finance, driven by recent U.S. regulatory actions. Moves by agencies like the SEC, DTCC, and OCC are enabling tokenized assets and stablecoins within core market infrastructure. This evolution signals blockchain as an upgrade to existing systems rather than a parallel alternative.

Mastercard has unveiled a new Crypto Partner Program uniting more than 85 companies from the blockchain, fintech, and banking sectors to integrate digital assets into everyday payments. The initiative focuses on practical applications like cross-border transfers and business-to-business payments. Executives describe it as a bridge between on-chain innovation and traditional financial infrastructure.

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Building on December's charter approvals for firms like Circle and Ripple, the U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) has proposed detailed rules to implement the GENIUS Act for stablecoin issuers, addressing reserves, custody, redemption, and rewards programs on platforms like Coinbase. The 376-page proposal emerged on the eve of a Senate Banking Committee hearing where regulators testified on crypto oversight, amid industry concerns over operational impacts.

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