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Fed Policy Gives Big Banks a Crypto Edge, Warns CEO of Custodia Bank

Fed Policy Gives Big Banks a Crypto Edge, Warns CEO of Custodia Bank
© Copyright Image: Coindoo

In a detailed thread, Long explains how the Feds selective enforcement of anti-crypto policies is not only delaying innovation but also giving a major head start to big banks launching permissioned stablecoins.

A Lone Anti-Crypto Rule Left Standing

On January 27, 2023, the Biden administration coordinated with the Federal Reserve to release several statements targeting crypto. Since then, four of the five issued regulations have been rescindedexcept one. The surviving guidance, Long notes, reveals the Feds consistent anti-crypto stance: it blocks banks from:

  • Touching cryptoassets as principal, even in small amounts (such as covering gas fees),
  • Issuing stablecoins on permissionless blockchains.

Additionally, the Feds policy explicitly favors permissioned blockchains over permissionless onesa preference not shared by other federal banking agencies like the OCC and FDIC, who have already rescinded their similar positions.

In effect, the Fed maintains a regulatory bias: it supports permissioned (i.e., controlled by a select group, typically large banks) stablecoins while hampering broader decentralized innovation.

The Race Before the Rules Change

Long points out that a stablecoin bill currently under consideration would overturn the Feds favoritism for permissioned blockchains. Until then, however, big banks private stablecoins are given a critical early-mover advantage, positioning them strongly before the stablecoin market truly opens under new legislation.

She warns: Congress should hurry up!

Custody Complications: Sand in the Wheels

Beyond stablecoins, the Feds retained policies significantly impair banks ability to participate in crypto custody services. Long explains the practical issues:

  • Transaction Fees: Custodians typically pre-estimate transaction (gas) fees, but fluctuations in on-chain fees can cause transactions to fail. Since banks cannot hold cryptoassets even for fee payment, their operations are severely limited.
  • Risk Management Practices: Custodians often split large holdings into smaller transactions to reduce risk. Paying multiple gas fees for these operations would be practically unworkable for banks barred from managing crypto directly.

Thus, by blocking direct crypto exposure, the Fed is quietly discouraging banks from entering the digital asset custody market at all.

Summary: Structural Advantage for Big Banks

In Longs view, the Feds current position serves two purposes:

  • Blocks banks from becoming custodians of major cryptoassets like BTC, ETH, and SOL.
  • Gives big banks a structural advantage to launch permissioned stablecoins ahead of competitors, while the broader market waits for Congressional action.

The result? The Fed isnt just slowing crypto adoptionits actively shaping the playing field to favor traditional banking giants.

The post Fed Policy Gives Big Banks a Crypto Edge, Warns CEO of Custodia Bank appeared first on Coindoo.

Read more: https://coindoo.com/fed-policy-gives-big-banks-a-crypto-edge-warns-ceo-of-custodia-bank/

Text source: Coindoo

Disclaimer: Financial information and news are not financial advice, read the disclaimer.
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