Comptroller reveals path for crypto companies to become banks

Published on by Cointele | Published on

Acting Comptroller of the Currency Brian Brooks - soon to be confirmed in the role full time - has revealed another way for U.S. crypto custody providers to receive a charter to operate as a federally-approved bank.

In a Nov. 17 interview with Forbes, Brooks stated that there are currently three methods for payment companies to become a federally chartered bank.

Brooks said the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, or OCC, was on the cusp of allowing trust companies to become banks.

According to Brooks, companies like Anchorage, Coinbase Custody, and Gemini are already operating as trust companies under state-issued trust company charters.

The Acting Comptroller said that the OCC had "a number of applications" from crypto companies to convert these charters into National Trust Bank charters.

Brooks announced in July that the OCC would grant permission to federally chartered banks to provide custody services for cryptocurrency.

"That's where we see payments companies coming in the next couple of months," said Brooks.

The statement comes the same day President Donald Trump announced his intention to make Brooks full-time Acting Comptroller of the Currency.

With just 63 days left in office, Trump released a statement through the White House website saying he would be nominating Brooks for a five-year term as Comptroller of the Currency.

Brooks, the former chief legal officer at crypto exchange Coinbase, has been in the temporary position since May. Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin appointed Brooks following former comptroller Joseph Otting's resignation.

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