The crypto–banking landscape in the United States is shifting again after the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency released new guidance that formally authorizes national banks to intermediate crypto transactions.
The update, published as Interpretive Letter 1188 on December 9, 2025, marks another major step toward integrating digital assets into the country’s regulated financial system.
Banks Can Now Facilitate “Riskless Principal” Crypto Trades
The OCC’s latest interpretation confirms that national banks may participate in riskless principal transactions involving crypto assets. In this model, a bank briefly buys a digital asset from one customer and sells it immediately to another in a fully offsetting transaction. Because the bank does not retain inventory or take on prolonged market exposure, the activity is classified as low-risk and aligns with established brokerage practices already permitted in traditional finance.
The letter emphasizes that these transactions are functionally equivalent to long-standing securities intermediation, reinforcing the OCC’s position that financial activity should be regulated based on risk rather than technology. This principle continues the agency’s technology-neutral approach, which recognizes crypto as a modern extension of familiar financial services.
Supervision and Regulatory Expectations
Although permission has been granted, banks must operate within strict supervisory boundaries. The OCC clarified that institutions engaging in crypto intermediation must maintain:
- •Strong risk-management controls
- •Clear customer protections
- •Robust compliance systems
- •Safe-and-sound operational frameworks
Banks will be monitored through the OCC’s standard supervisory process, ensuring digital asset activities remain consistent with safety expectations applied across the banking sector.
A Broader Shift in U.S. Crypto Regulation
The new guidance arrives during a pivotal moment for American financial regulators. Throughout 2025, agencies including the OCC, the Federal Reserve, and the FDIC have withdrawn earlier restrictive statements that discouraged banks from engaging in digital asset services. The message is increasingly unified: digital asset activities can operate inside the regulated banking perimeter when executed responsibly.
This policy evolution reflects a growing effort to modernize banking activity and respond to rising institutional demand for compliant crypto infrastructure. By enabling banks to intermediate crypto trades without taking balance-sheet risk, regulators are laying the foundation for greater integration between traditional finance and the digital-asset economy.

