FDIC Nears Deal With Crypto Custodian to Manage Assets of Failed Banks
When a bank fails anywhere in the U.S., the federal agency known as the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation rushes in to backstop depositors and clean up the mess—a task that includes liquidating the bank's loans and o...
When a bank fails anywhere in the U.S., the federal agency known as the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation rushes in to backstop depositors and clean up the mess—a task that includes liquidating the bank's loans and other assets. Now, in a sign of the times, the FDIC is close to hiring a cryptocurrency custodian to help it out.
According to sources with knowledge of the deal, the federal agency is set to hire San Francisco-based Anchorage to help it store and sell any Bitcoin and other digital assets it obtains in the course of a bank failure. The sources, who were not authorized to speak for attribution, said the company and the FDIC are in the final stages of signing a contract.
Earlier this year, the Justice Department hired Anchorage to help the U.S. Marshalls Service, which is responsible for storing and auctioning the goods seized by the FBI, the DEA and other law enforcement agencies. Anchorage, which became the first crypto company to obtain a federal bank charter early this year, also provides custody services to the likes of Visa and big banks.
Anchorage and the FDIC declined to comment on the matter.
A decision by the FDIC to hire a crypto custodian would not be surprising given how a growing number of banks are exposed to cryptocurrency—either directly by holding it on their balance sheet, or indirectly by facilitating customers' ability to acquire. Crypto is also becoming widely used as loan collateral, which is likely to become another way the traditional financial industry becomes entwined with digital assets.
All of this reflects how the banking system—and the federal regulators that oversee it—is becoming evermore connected with the crypto industry, even as they profess skepticism about many aspects of digital currency.
It remains to be seen if the FDIC will contemplate investor protection to those who store their digital assets with services like Coinbase or Gemini—crypto companies that are coming in many ways to resemble traditional banks. Right now, that protection amounts to deposit insurance worth $250,000 on a narrow range of products such as checking and savings accounts, and certificates of deposits.
Anchorage and Crypto-focused BankProv to Provide Ethereum-backed Loans
The FDIC's backstop is funded by deposit insurance paid by the banks, and is something to which mainstream crypto companies would like contribute in exchange for having the agency's guarantee—a guarantee that could persuade even more retail investors into crypto.
Not everyone, however, believes an FDIC backstop is as valuable as it used to be. Speaking at Decrypt's Ethereal conference earlier this year, wealth management mogul and crypto booster Ross Gerber blasted the agency.
"The FDIC doesn't exist. That's a fucking fantasy. Rule number one: Any promise the U.S. government makes is a fantasy. We don't have any money, we have a trillion in debt," said Gerber.
"So if the banks go under, if JP Morgan goes under, FDIC covers 0% of it. We saw this happen. It's just a fallacy. The banks are the worst-run institutions in America. To think that that's some level of safety with your money is the biggest fallacy I've ever heard," he said.
Editor's note: An editing typo in this story has been corrected to reflect that the reporting is based on multiple sources.
Original source
Read on DecryptRelated market context
‘Anarchistic neobanks’ are bitcoin’s next frontier, says Blockrise CEO
Blockrise CEO Jos Lazet sees bitcoin-native institutions evolving into alternatives to banks, in an interview at BTC Prague.
Canton Network Developer Digital Asset Raises $355 Million Led by a16z Crypto to Bring Wall Street Onchain
Digital Asset, the developer of the Canton Network, raised $355 million in a funding round led by a16z crypto, the company announc...
SEC targets 20-year-old rule standing between Wall Street and blockchain trading
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is moving to dismantle a stock-trading rule that has governed Wall Street for two dec...
Bitcoin's Hidden Yield: Why Options Are Taking Over Crypto | David Lawant, Anchorage Digital
🎧 Listen to Interview 💻 Watch Video... Read the full story at The Defiant
Fortune Names 30 Crypto Innovators for 2026
Key Takeaways: Fortune has just released its list of the top 30 companies and projects that are changing the face of the crypto se...
Kraken Adds USDCx Support On Canton As Institutional Stablecoin Rails Expand
TL;DR Kraken says it now supports USDCx deposits and withdrawals on the Canton Network. USDCx is described as a Canton-native stab...