Leading financial institutions across the United States are evaluating litigation options against the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency following its decision to grant banking charters to cryptocurrency companies. Traditional banking associations contend that the OCC has fundamentally altered the interpretation of federal charter regulations, enabling technology-focused financial firms to obtain national trust bank privileges without meeting equivalent standards.
In December 2025, the OCC issued conditional trust charter approval to Ripple alongside several other digital asset enterprises. This authorization permits Ripple to conduct banking operations across all fifty states under federal supervision. Critics from established banking institutions maintain that this regulatory approach establishes disparate treatment between conventional lenders and cryptocurrency operators.
Established financial institutions contend that digital asset companies can now function without adhering to the stringent capital requirements mandatory for traditional commercial banks. Banking representatives assert the approval methodology employed by regulators fails to incorporate comparable supervisory mechanisms. Consequently, prominent banking advocacy organizations are now examining potential litigation pathways to contest the regulator’s interpretation of charter authority.
The Bank Policy Institute, which represents prominent financial institutions nationwide, believes the OCC has exceeded its statutory authority in charter interpretation. This organization previously cautioned regulatory bodies that approving crypto-focused charters would introduce significant policy vulnerabilities. Banking groups now view legal proceedings as necessary to compel comprehensive reassessment of the licensing framework.
Circle secured conditional regulatory approval during the identical December authorization cycle managed by the OCC. The stablecoin company intends to broaden its custody operations, token issuance capabilities, and payment settlement services operating under national trust authority. Traditional banking representatives argue this regulatory decision provides federal legitimacy without implementing proportionate supervisory controls.
Banking trade associations maintain that national trust charter privileges should not circumvent established deposit insurance protocols. Industry representatives express concern that entities operating under these authorizations may evade consumer protection measures mandated for traditional banking institutions. Opponents characterize the regulatory policy as potentially destabilizing to financial system integrity.
State-level banking supervisors have similarly challenged these regulatory developments. The Conference of State Bank Supervisors issued warnings that expanded charter accessibility could undermine consumer safeguards and competitive balance within the banking sector. Community banking coalitions have called upon the OCC to halt additional approvals pending development of enhanced oversight protocols.
Paxos secured conditional approval alongside Ripple and Circle as part of the coordinated authorization initiative. The simultaneous approval of multiple cryptocurrency enterprises marked an unprecedented regulatory development within the digital asset sector. This coordinated approach indicates the OCC’s systematic effort to incorporate blockchain-based financial services companies into federal banking regulatory structures.
Following these initial approvals, numerous additional companies have entered the regulatory review process. Crypto.com obtained conditional authorization in February to offer digital asset custody and staking operations under trust charter provisions. Concurrently, Revolut modified its regulatory strategy and filed a fresh application for federal charter consideration.
World Liberty Financial represents another applicant pursuing charter authorization through its subsidiary entity WLTC Holdings. This organization aims to issue and maintain custody of its USD1 stablecoin product under OCC regulatory jurisdiction. Congressional representatives have requested detailed explanations regarding safeguards protecting the integrity of the charter evaluation process.
These regulatory developments align with comprehensive federal stablecoin legislation that became law in July 2025. This statutory framework established reserve holding mandates and prohibited yield generation on payment stablecoins. Despite substantial opposition from traditional banking organizations, the OCC maintains its trajectory of approving additional applications as implementation continues.
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