Key Takeaway:
- OCC grants Bridge conditional approval to become a national trust bank.
- Paves way for bank-supervised stablecoin rails in commerce and development.
- Trust charter emphasizes custody and fiduciary services, excluding insured deposits.
Bridge, the stablecoin infrastructure firm owned by Stripe, received conditional approval from a U.S. banking regulator to become a national trust bank, as reported by Bloomberg. The decision advances federal oversight of stablecoin infrastructure within a major payments ecosystem. It signals potential for bank-supervised stablecoin rails in commerce and developer workflows.
Conditional approval is not a final charter. It indicates preliminary authorization subject to pre-opening conditions such as capitalization, governance, risk management, and Bank Secrecy Act controls. Only after meeting these requirements and passing supervisory reviews can operations commence under the charter.
A national trust bank charter typically authorizes fiduciary and custody activities, not insured deposit-taking, and it operates under tailored powers and limits. For Bridge, that framework could support institutional-grade stablecoin services aligned with bank risk standards. The arrangement may help counterparties rely on regulated onboarding and controls when interacting with stablecoin infrastructure.
The charter path differs from a full-service national bank. Trust banks generally cannot offer demand deposits or engage in broad lending, which narrows product scope but can streamline custody and settlement functions. For Stripe’s ecosystem, any rollout would need to map merchant and developer use cases to these permitted activities and supervisory conditions.
Industry groups have questioned whether a stablecoin-focused trust bank could exceed those limits. According to American Banker, the Independent Community Bankers of America argued Bridge’s plan risks offering deposit-like services without equivalent obligations of a full-service bank. The letter also warned of potential regulatory arbitrage if stablecoin activities mirror banking functions under a narrower charter.
Additional opposition letters came from the Bank Policy Institute, the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, and Fair Finance Watch, as reported by Pymnts.com. Their filings flagged oversight gaps while new federal stablecoin rules are still being implemented. They cautioned that premature chartering could raise fraud and illicit-finance risks if safeguards lag product rollout.
Regulators have framed new charters as a way to preserve competition while imposing supervisory standards. “New entrants into the federal banking sector are good for consumers, the banking industry and the economy, providing access to new products, services and maintaining a dynamic, competitive and diverse banking system,” said Comptroller Jonathan V. Gould at the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.
Next steps typically include satisfying all conditions in the approval, completing pre-opening examinations, and finalizing compliance programs. Bridge’s launch under the charter would depend on the federal supervisor’s verification that these requirements are met. Service availability would occur only after conditions are satisfied and sign-off is complete, aligned with trust bank permissions.
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