US Federal Reserve denies Custodia Bank's request for Fed supervision

The United States Federal Reserve has denied a request from cryptocurrency bank Custodia Bank to reconsider its membership application to the Federal Reserve System.

The Fed announced its denial on Feb. 23 saying the Federal Reserve Board previously decided that Custodia’s application “was inconsistent with the required factors under the law.”

@federalreserve announces it has denied the request by Custodia Bank, Inc., for reconsideration of the Board’s decision last month on its application to be supervised by the Federal Reserve: https://t.co/ZYNUEoLeN1

— Federal Reserve (@federalreserve) February 23, 2023

In January, the Fed rejected Custodia’s application to become a member. Board rules allow applicants to request a reconsideration of membership decisions.

Related: IMF exec board endorses crypto policy framework, including no crypto as legal tender

At the time of the initial rejection, the Fed claimed Custodia had an “insufficient” management framework.

It also cited a joint declaration it made alongside the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) and Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) that claimed cryptocurrencies were “inconsistent with safe and sound banking practices.”

US AML watchdog wants info on all international crypto transactions over $250   Oct. 23, 2020
Crypto bank Custodia sues the Fed over 19 month delay on account approval   June 8, 2022
Fed denies Custodia Bank application to join the Federal Reserve System   Jan. 27, 2023
US agencies recommend old risk management principles for crypto liquidity   Feb. 25, 2023
Better to get it right than to be first with CBDC, says US Fed chair   Oct. 19, 2020