An executive at major stablecoin issuer Circle denied reports that the company is looking to obtain a US federal bank charter.
In an April 25 X post, Circle’s chief strategy officer and head of global policy, Dante Disparte, denied that the company is interested in obtaining a US federal bank charter or acquiring an insured depository institution.
Instead, he said that Circle intends to comply with future US regulatory requirements for payment stablecoins, “which may require registering for a federal or state trust charter or other nonbank license.” He also urged lawmakers to reach regulatory clarity for stablecoins sooner rather than later.
The statement followed recent reports that major cryptocurrency firms, including stablecoin issuer Circle and crypto custodian BitGo, were considering applying for bank charters or licenses. Other firms cited as seeking such licenses included publicly traded US-based crypto exchange Coinbase and stablecoin issuer Paxos.
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The report was not entirely baseless
Cointelegraph reached out to all the companies cited in the report, requesting a confirmation or denial. All companies except one did not comment, with Coinbase confirming that it is considering such a license.
Still, it was not the first report that Circle was interested in a US bank charter. In April 2022, Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire said in an interview with Bloomberg that the firm was already in discussions with regulators as part of its efforts to apply for a bank charter “hopefully in the near future.”
Circle did not respond to Cointelegraph’s request for further comment as of publication time.
Another previous report indicated that the US Office of the Comptroller of the Currency had granted a preliminary, conditional approval for a US bank charter to Paxos in 2021.
Related: Circle considers IPO delay amid economic uncertainty — Report
US stablecoin regulation is evolving
The news came as US regulators were working to change how stablecoins are regulated. The US House Financial Services Committee passed a Republican-backed stablecoin framework bill earlier this month.
The bill in question is the Stablecoin Transparency and Accountability for a Better Ledger Economy (STABLE) Act. Another bill currently moving through the US legislative process is the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for US Stablecoins (GENIUS) Act.
The STABLE and GENIUS bills differ in how they would regulate the stablecoin industry, with the former emphasizing strict federal oversight and the latter being more flexible, allowing for both federal and state rules. The GENIUS Act bill was introduced first and passed the US Senate Banking Committee in mid-March.
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