The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency [OCC] has confirmed that U.S. national banks may legally conduct “riskless principal” transactions in crypto-assets.
This extends existing brokerage powers to digital assets that are not classified as securities—including Bitcoin.
In OCC Interpretive Letter #1188, released on 9 December, the OCC stated that banks can purchase crypto and immediately resell it to a customer without incurring market exposure. This thereby places crypto brokerage activity under established banking functions.
Also, the ruling effectively clears a regulatory path for banks to offer direct crypto execution without relying on external platforms.
Part of a wider realignment driven by the GENIUS Act
The OCC interpretive letter follows structural changes ushered in by the GENIUS Act. The Act removed outdated restrictions and clarified the legal basis for tokenized and digital-asset activity across federal agencies.
The OCC letter points to a shift from treating crypto as an exception to recognising its role inside the existing banking framework.
Furthermore, by treating crypto brokerage as a normal banking activity, the OCC is signalling that regulated intermediaries are now expected to participate in digital-asset markets rather than avoid them.
This creates room for banks to design client-facing crypto products under supervisory oversight, rather than pushing customers toward offshore exchanges.
OCC letter follows CFTC approval for tokenized collateral
The OCC interpretive letter arrives just one day after the Commodity Futures Trading Commission [CFTC] launched a pilot program. The program allows Bitcoin, Ethereum, and USDC to be used as collateral in U.S. derivatives markets.
That initiative also withdrew older guidance now considered outdated under the GENIUS Act. It introduced formal guardrails for tokenized settlement, custody, and capital requirements.
Together, the OCC and CFTC developments signal a coordinated regulatory approach aimed at bringing crypto trading, settlement, and collateral inside U.S. market infrastructure rather than leaving it to offshore venues.
Toward a regulated, onshore crypto market
U.S. regulators are moving from enforcement toward integration, positioning tokenization and digital assets within the supervisory perimeter.
This shift could enhance safety, reduce reliance on foreign exchange markets, and accelerate institutional adoption by providing familiar regulatory treatment.
Final Thoughts
- The OCC interpretive letter gives banks legal clarity to intermediate crypto as part of normal brokerage functions.
- Combined with the CFTC collateral approval, the U.S. appears to be transitioning toward regulated onshore crypto markets rather than excluding digital assets from the financial system.