U.S. regulators and the Federal Reserve have issued a joint warning about key liquidity risks associated with crypto assets. However, the regulators clarified that banks “are neither prohibited nor discouraged from providing banking services to customers of any specific class or type, as permitted by law or regulation.”
US Regulators Issue Joint Statement on Crypto
The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) jointly issued a statement regarding crypto on Thursday.
The Federal Reserve, the FDIC, and the OCC explained that their statement “highlights key liquidity risks associated with crypto assets and crypto-asset sector participants that banking organizations should be aware of.” They warned:
In particular, certain sources of funding from crypto asset-related entities may pose heightened liquidity risks to banking organizations due to the unpredictability of the scale and timing of deposit inflows and outflows.
For example, the stability of deposits by crypto entities for the benefit of their customers may be driven by “the behavior of the end customer or crypto-asset sector dynamics, and not solely by the crypto-asset-related entity itself, which is the banking organization’s direct counterparty,” the regulators cautioned. “Such deposits can be susceptible to large and rapid inflows as well as outflows, when end customers react to crypto-asset-sector-related market events, media reports, and uncertainty.”
Another example is deposits that “constitute stablecoin-related reserves,” which may be “susceptible to large and rapid outflows,” including from “unanticipated stablecoin redemptions or dislocations in crypto-asset markets,” the regulators detailed.
Banking organizations using funding sources from crypto entities need to actively monitor liquidity risks and establish effective risk management and controls, the Federal Reserve, the FDIC, and the OCC advised. While emphasizing that banking organizations should apply existing risk management principles to crypto, the regulators clarified:
Banking organizations are neither prohibited nor discouraged from providing banking services to customers of any specific class or type, as permitted by law or regulation.
The Fed, the FDIC, and the OCC also issued a joint warning about crypto risks in January. The regulators mentioned fraud, scams, legal uncertainties, inaccurate or misleading representations by crypto companies, significant volatility in crypto markets, run risks, and contagion risks.
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What do you think about the joint warning about cryptocurrency by the Federal Reserve, the FDIC, and the OCC? Let us know in the comments section below.
Kevin Helms
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