Coinbase Gets a Federal Pass… and a Headache?

Coinbase, that paragon of digital virtue, was granted a conditional nod by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) to charter Coinbase National Trust Company, bestowing the exchange with a federal regulatory home for its custody business.

The OCC charter, a relic of the old guard, is structured for assets in safekeeping, not commercial banking. Coinbase, that shrewd operator, will not take retail deposits or engage in fractional reserve banking under this framework-though one wonders if the OCC’s ledger is any less fractional.

What the OCC Charter Actually Covers

The approval targets Coinbase’s existing custody and market infrastructure operations, a realm where federal oversight now replaces the patchwork of state-by-state rules that previously governed those services. It’s like swapping a quilt of chaos for a single, stiff blanket.

Greg Tusar, Co-CEO of Coinbase Institutional, outlined the scope directly in a company statement. “This charter is about bringing federal regulatory uniformity to the custody and market infrastructure business we have been building for years,” he said, as if the stars themselves had aligned for his grand vision.

“This charter is about bringing federal regulatory uniformity to the custody and market infrastructure business we have been building for years,” read an excerpt in the announcement, citing Tusar.

Conditional approval means Coinbase must still satisfy specific OCC requirements before the charter becomes fully active. The exchange confirmed it will work closely with OCC staff through that process-like a child learning to tie their shoes, albeit with a $500 million budget.

What Stays the Same and What Opens Up

Coinbase’s 2015 New York Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) BitLicense and its existing state trust charter remain in place. Coinbase, Inc. continues to operate under NYDFS oversight without change-because why fix what isn’t broken, right?

The federal charter also creates a foundation for new payment products and related financial services. Tusar cited institutional partners and individual customers as the primary beneficiaries of that expanded capability. Or, as the rest of us might call it, “a way to make more money off the same people.”

Congress has advanced market structure legislation, but federal oversight for crypto custodians has remained fragmented. The OCC approval addresses that gap at the institutional level without waiting for full legislative action. Because nothing says “democracy” like a few bureaucrats deciding the future of finance.

The coming weeks will show how quickly Coinbase can satisfy the OCC’s conditions and whether other major exchanges pursue similar federal charters. One can only hope they’re as charming as a tax audit in a tornado.

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2026-04-02 18:47