EDX Markets has applied for an Office of the Comptroller of the Currency trust bank charter to create EDX Trust, National Association, a move that could expand its regulated crypto custody and settlement stack for institutions. The upside is a single federal framework for services EDX says institutions want, but the filing is still an application rather than an approval.
The OCC’s digital-assets licensing applications table lists EDX Trust, N.A. with a receipt date of March 26, 2026, confirming the proposal has reached the regulator’s public docket.
Key Takeaway
- EDX wants a national trust bank structure to add custody, fiduciary asset management, and settlement to its institutional crypto business.
- The filing keeps order matching at EDX Markets while shifting custody and trade settlement to the proposed trust bank.
- The application places EDX inside a broader race for federally supervised crypto infrastructure, but the OCC has not approved the charter.
Why EDX Markets is seeking an OCC trust bank charter
In a March 25, 2026 application, EDX Markets Holding Company asked the OCC to organize EDX Trust, National Association as a de novo national trust bank and authorize certain digital-asset activities. In plain language, that structure would let the company run custody and related fiduciary services under one national trust charter instead of piecing together state-by-state permissions.
The filing says EDX Trust would provide digital-asset custody, fiduciary asset-management services, and riskless-principal trading for customers. It also says order matching would remain at EDX Markets, while the proposed trust bank would handle custody and trade settlement.
EDX further says spot trades would settle at the end of each business day on a net basis, keeping the matching venue and the settlement layer distinct. For institutions weighing counterparty and operational risk after events such as Drift Protocol Warns of Potential Cybersecurity Exploit, that separation is a practical part of EDX’s pitch even before any charter decision arrives.
What approval could unlock for EDX’s crypto business
The application says the charter would let EDX serve broker-dealers, futures commission merchants, and registered investment advisers nationwide from Chicago under a single federal regulatory framework. That is the bull case for the filing: fewer licensing fragments, one supervisory regime, and a cleaner way to present trading, custody, and settlement to institutional clients.
The bear case is timing and execution. The public record currently shows a March 26, 2026 receipt date, but it does not show an approval, a launch schedule, or initial client volumes for EDX Trust.
EDX says it launched in 2022 and is backed by a consortium of prominent Wall Street firms, which helps explain why it is pursuing a bank-style wrapper around institutional crypto plumbing. The broader competition is also moving toward regulated rails, a theme that overlaps with Ripple Brings Crypto Capabilities to Treasury Management Systems as traditional finance looks for compliant ways to plug digital assets into existing workflows.
Why the filing matters for the broader crypto market
The OCC’s digital-assets licensing applications page also lists zerohash, Morgan Stanley Digital Trust, Laser Digital, and Coinbase National Trust Company, placing EDX inside a wider race to secure federal trust-bank frameworks for digital assets. That matters because custody and settlement are turning into competitive differentiators rather than just back-office functions.
That push is arriving while institutions are also scrutinizing infrastructure durability, from cybersecurity to future-proofed network design, which is why themes raised in Naoris Post-Quantum Blockchain Launch and Quantum Risks sit closer to this story than the headline alone suggests. A national trust bank charter would not remove market or technology risk, but it could change who supervises those risks and how widely a provider can market its services.
Against that backdrop, Bitcoin traded at $68,326, up about 0.30% over 24 hours, while the Fear and Greed Index stood at 8, classified as Extreme Fear, when the filing surfaced. That mix of a steady BTC tape and deeply negative sentiment suggests the EDX application landed in a cautious market rather than triggering a broad risk-on move.
What institutions should watch next
The constructive view is that EDX has put unusually specific operating details into a public filing, including Chicago as the base, EDX Markets as the matching venue, and EDX Trust as the custody and settlement layer. Specificity matters because institutions usually want workflow clarity before moving assets onto a new platform.
The skeptical view is simpler: the OCC has acknowledged the filing, but not yet approved it, and the Fear and Greed Index reading of 8 shows investors were still in a defensive posture when the application became public. If approval comes later, EDX could gain a stronger regulated pitch; until then, the market has a detailed proposal rather than a new federally chartered crypto trust bank.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.
