Coinbase Global, Inc. announced on Thursday that it has received conditional approval from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) to operate as a trust bank. This approval represents a preliminary agreement confirming that the company's application meets core regulatory requirements. However, Coinbase must satisfy several additional conditions before it can formally operate with the trust bank charter.
Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal stated, "Long-term, we will explore with the OCC not only providing custody services but also launching other infrastructure products, especially in the payments sector. We believe this will help drive crypto payments toward various new, interesting, and important directions." He added, "We would not be moving forward with this if we did not see a major opportunity in crypto infrastructure, including payments. The OCC's conditional approval is a significant statement from the agency—they want these types of products and services, particularly in payments and custody, to develop first within the United States."
The company emphasized that it will not function as a commercial bank, will not accept retail deposits, and will not utilize a fractional reserve banking system common among large banks. Nevertheless, the trust charter will grant it legal authority, access to banking infrastructure, and regulatory credibility, enabling more efficient fund transfers, holding, and clearing. This could potentially strengthen its competitive position against companies like PayPal and Square.
Following the approval, Coinbase will be directly supervised by the OCC, one of the three primary federal U.S. banking regulators, rather than being subject to state-by-state oversight. This has been a significant pain point for fast-growing industries like cryptocurrency. Grewal noted that previously, "this was the only viable path." He referenced former President Trump's pledge to make the U.S. the "crypto capital of the world" in a potential second term, contrasting it with the perceived anti-crypto stance of the Biden administration, which some in the industry believe hindered U.S. growth and global leadership in crypto.
For many high-growth startups in financial services, the state-by-state regulatory model is cumbersome, requiring adherence to 50 slightly different rule sets instead of a unified standard, which slows development and increases costs.
Coinbase has established a payments strategy centered on making stablecoins, particularly Circle's USDC, a mainstream global payment method. Last year, the company launched Coinbase Payments, offering wallet integration and stablecoin payment settlement services to platforms and merchants. It also partnered with Shopify to launch a payment protocol based on its own Base blockchain. Additionally, collaborations with Shopify and Stripe allow their merchant partners to accept USDC stablecoin payments.
Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong stated the company has an "ambitious goal": for USDC to surpass Tether's USDT as the world's largest stablecoin and to build Coinbase into the "number one global financial services application" within the next few years. On crypto policy, Armstrong has become one of the most influential private-sector voices in the U.S. Congress, particularly in recent negotiations surrounding the Clarity Act.
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