XRP News Today: Coinbase Pursues Federal Charter to Bridge Crypto and Traditional Finance

Generado por agente de IACoin World
sábado, 4 de octubre de 2025, 6:29 am ET1 min de lectura
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Coinbase has applied for a National Trust Company Charter from the U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), joining crypto firms Ripple and CircleCRCL-- in a broader industry push for federal regulatory claritytitle1[1]. The move aims to streamline compliance and expand Coinbase's digital asset services, including custody, payments, and institutional product offeringstitle2[2]. The company emphasized it has no intention of becoming a bank but seeks to bridge the crypto economy with traditional finance while ensuring "proper oversight and security"title3[3].

The application aligns with existing state licenses, such as New York's BitLicense, which CoinbaseCOIN-- has held since 2015title1[1]. A federal charter would reduce the complexity of multi-state compliance and accelerate product development, the firm noted. Ripple and Circle, both stablecoin issuers, have similarly pursued OCC charters, reflecting a strategic shift to nationalize operations and reduce reliance on fragmented state-level frameworkstitle3[3]. Anchorage Digital, the first crypto firm to secure an OCC charter in 2021, serves as a precedent, demonstrating the viability of federal oversight for digital asset custodianstitle3[3].

Coinbase's application underscores the growing institutionalization of crypto services. The company, which manages BitcoinBTC-- for BlackRock and Fidelity's crypto ETFs and partners with JPMorganChase for crypto access, has positioned itself as a critical infrastructure playertitle4[4]. By seeking a federal charter, Coinbase aims to enhance its credibility for institutional clients while navigating regulatory scrutiny from banking associations, which have raised concerns about crypto firms' operational riskstitle5[5].

The regulatory landscape for crypto firms remains contentious. While the OCC has granted one charter to date, the process involves significant compliance costs and close regulatory engagementtitle3[3]. Ripple's CEO Brian Armstrong has criticized banking lobbies opposing crypto innovation, arguing that competition benefits consumerstitle5[5]. Meanwhile, the SEC's recent guidance allowing state-chartered trust companies to act as crypto custodians has created a transitional framework, but federal charters are seen as a more sustainable solutiontitle5[5].

Industry analysts view the OCC charter race as a pivotal step in integrating crypto with traditional finance. Circle, which issues the USDCUSDC-- stablecoin, expects a national charter to unlock nationwide custody and payment servicestitle3[3]. Paxos, another applicant, highlighted the potential for streamlined compliance and expanded tokenization efforts under federal oversighttitle3[3]. With three of the largest crypto firms pursuing this route, the sector's push for regulatory clarity signals a long-term strategy to scale operations and solidify institutional adoptiontitle1[1].

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