BREAKING: US Federal Reserve Drops Bombshell Crypto Boost – Markets Set to Rocket
The Federal Reserve just handed crypto bulls the ultimate gift—and Wall Street didn't see it coming.
The pivot nobody predicted
Jerome Powell's crew dropped regulatory shackles faster than a Bitcoin miner dumps hardware after halving. Details remain scarce, but insiders whisper this could be the institutional greenlight we've been waiting for.
Market tsunami incoming
Futures already ticking up as traders price in what the suits finally figured out—you can't stop decentralized money. Though knowing DC, they'll probably try to tax it three different ways by Tuesday.
One thing's certain: the Fed just went from crypto skeptic to accidental hype man. And the market's about to write them one hell of a thank-you note.
Clearing The Path For Crypto
The US central bank stated that its Board has started the process of “reviewing and removing references to reputation and reputational risk from its supervisory materials, including examination manuals.”
The Fed has now joined other American bank regulators, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, in moving to drop the examination standard.
Reputational risk was seen as a major driver of debanking as financial instutions took this into account when evaluating a client’s suitability for access to their services. It also proved a major hurdle for crypto companies and organizations under the Biden administration, which was at war with the industry with Operation Chokepoint 2.0 and similar politicized weapons.
More than 30 crypto and tech companies were denied US banking services following the 2023 crypto bank collapses, creating industry-wide banking access problems under Biden’s Operation Chokepoint 2.0.
This is “clearing the path for banks to work with crypto without fear of getting flagged for it,” said Bitcoin OG Kyle Chassé.
In February, Representative Dan Meuser and other lawmakers sent a letter to the FDIC calling for clearer digital asset rules and anti-debanking measures.
Debanking continues globally
Debanking is when banks close or restrict access to accounts for individuals or organizations they consider to pose a financial, legal, or reputational risk.
They can target a complete industry, such as crypto, or individuals who make transactions with crypto exchanges.
Debanking is particularly prevalent in third-world countries where citizens often struggle to produce the raft of KYC documentation banks demand these days.
This was one of the reasons that crypto was created: to cut out the middleman (the bank) and transact peer-to-peer. However, more than 15 years after bitcoin was activated, banks still rule the roost.