Fed proposes rule to deal with crypto debanking by scrapping 'reputation risk'
BY Coindesk | ECONOMIC | 02/24/26 01:29 PM ESTDays after JPMorgan Chase & Co.
"We have heard troubling cases of debanking ? where supervisors use concerns about reputation risk to pressure financial institutions to debank customers because of their political views, religious beliefs or involvement in disfavored but lawful businesses," including cryptocurrency, said Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle W. Bowman.
"Discrimination by financial institutions on these bases is unlawful and does not have a role in the Federal Reserve's supervisory framework," she added.
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, in its capacity as the supervisor of national banks, had already moved to cut reputational factors from its supervision last year, and the Federal Reserve had similarly announced in July that such risk would no longer be a part of its bank examinations, so this rule process would codify that move.
Crypto
In a Jan. 26 memo to the Board of Governors, the Fed?s staff wrote that the board's proposal would ?codify the removal of reputation risk from the Board?s supervisory programs? and prohibit the Fed from ?encouraging or compelling? banks to deny or condition services to customers involved in ?politically disfavored but lawful business activities.?
In the proposal, the Fed Board said it intends to include ?permitted payment stablecoin issuers? within its definition of covered banking organizations after completing separate rulemakings, a move that could directly affect crypto-native firms seeking access to the banking system.
The Fed said comments on its proposal to remove reputation risk from its supervision of banks are due in 60 days from Feb. 23.
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