BTCC / BTCC Square / Cryptonews /
Crypto Titans Urge Trump to Slash Bank Fees for Data Access—Before It’s Too Late

Crypto Titans Urge Trump to Slash Bank Fees for Data Access—Before It’s Too Late

Author:
Cryptonews
Published:
2025-08-15 07:09:20
4
2

Crypto Executives Ask Trump to Block Bank Fees for Customer Data Access

Crypto heavyweights are mounting pressure on the Trump administration to axe predatory bank fees tied to customer data access—calling it a make-or-break moment for financial privacy.


The Fee Revolt Begins

Top execs argue banks are double-dipping: charging clients for access to their own transaction histories while quietly selling that data to third parties. Sound familiar? Just another day in legacy finance.


Why This Matters Now

With decentralized finance gaining traction, traditional institutions are scrambling to monetize every byte of user data before crypto alternatives render them obsolete. Too little, too late—DeFi doesn’t ask for permission.


The Bottom Line

This isn’t just about fees—it’s about who controls your financial identity. Banks see the writing on the blockchain wall. Question is, will Washington act before the industry self-custodies its way out of the system entirely?

Crypto Leaders Tell Trump Bank Data Fees Could Cripple U.S. Digital Finance

The group argued that these fees would damage the U.S. crypto, artificial intelligence, and digital payments industries, potentially shutting down services that depend on bank connectivity.

“Severing this connection will drive innovation offshore and diminish U.S. influence,” the letter stated, linking the issue directly to Trump’s pro-crypto agenda.

The dispute stems from an “open banking rule” finalized in October 2024 by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau under former President Joe Biden.

The rule granted customers the right to share their bank data with third-party providers at no cost, a MOVE widely celebrated by crypto companies but opposed by banking trade groups, which sued to block it.

Trump initially supported efforts to scrap the rule, siding with banks, but reversed course in late July under lobbying pressure from the crypto industry.

His administration has since told a federal judge it will keep the rule in place while working on a revised version.

Crypto firms say free data access is essential for integrating bank accounts with their platforms, enabling seamless fiat-to-crypto transfers.

Fintech and crypto execs are urging President TRUMP to stop banks like @JPMorgan from imposing predatory fees that will create new barriers and restrict your ability to control YOUR OWN banking data.

It’s part of Big Banks’ plan to consolidate power, crush innovation, and limit… pic.twitter.com/LqGAMOJd1M

— Will Hild (@WillHild) August 14, 2025

The letter to Trump argued that bank-imposed fees could “cripple innovative products” and jeopardize on-ramps to the digital asset ecosystem, undermining the president’s goal of making the US a SAFE harbor for crypto.

Banking groups, led by the American Bankers Association, pushed back strongly on Wednesday. They accused the crypto industry of seeking “government price fixing” and demanding special treatment.

“The double standard these companies want to perpetuate, where they may charge fees for service while banks are expected to provide the same service to these private companies for free, is absurd,” the ABA said in a statement.

The ABA framed the letter’s signatories as “middlemen” trying to leverage Biden-era policies “for personal profit” while benefiting from banks’ significant investments in data security.

Trump Administration Pushes Pro-Crypto Agenda

The Trump administration advanced its pro-crypto agenda this week with a series of policy and regulatory moves.

President Trump signed an executive order urging regulators to remove barriers that prevent 401(k) plans from including alternative assets such as cryptocurrencies.

If implemented, the reforms could allow millions of Americans to allocate retirement funds to Bitcoin and other digital assets through regulated channels.

Trump also nominated economist Stephen Miran, a digital asset advocate, to the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, signaling continuity in his administration’s pro-crypto stance.

|Square

Get the BTCC app to start your crypto journey

Get started today Scan to join our 100M+ users