Key insight: Banking sector voices warn fintech firms may be using national trust charters to gain access to banking privileges without full regulation or deposit insurance protection.
Supporting data: Bank trade groups have urged the OCC to pause reviews and reassess compliance with banking law.
Forward look: The OCC’s decisions will shape how far fintechs can stretch trust charters to enter banking without becoming full banks.
As the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency weighs applications from a number of crypto firms seeking national trust charters, influential banking industry voices are questioning whether the resulting businesses would align with the statutory and regulatory definition of the charter.
An industry spokesperson said the sector needs more information about what activities those seeking charters would actually engage in before deciding on next steps.
“The OCC hasn’t taken any action yet,” they said. “If they approve one or all of these charters, we will review what information is available, hopefully it will be more robust and we’ll be able to understand more fully what these entities are engaging in[,] whether those activities are consistent with the statute and the regulations and go from there.”
Trust companies are not new, but they’ve historically served a niche in the financial marketplace, allowing financial institutions to provide custodial services to their customers, like trust and estate management.
That changed after an OCC interpretive letter in 2021, written by then-OCC Chief Counsel and now-Comptroller of the Currency Jonathan Gould, opened the door for national trust banks to have broader flexibility to conduct banking and trust operations far beyond their traditional, narrowly defined fiduciary duties. The letter allows national trust banks to engage in certain noncustodial businesses as long as those businesses are related to the custodial business.
That potentially broad remit for firms with a national trust charter is enticing a number of fintech and crypto-aligned companies — including
Critics of allowing fintechs to gain national trust charters have
One industry analyst said it remains uncertain how stablecoin issuance in particular would be structured under proposed business plans, raising questions about how such activity fits within existing banking law. Depending on how stablecoin issuance at firms is structured, the service could be akin to deposit-taking under the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, according to the analyst.
“A lot of…
Read More: Banks urge scrutiny of fintech trust charter applications


