Headline: Fed fleshes out “skinny” master account plan as Trump orders deeper crypto integration and tougher BSA rules The Federal Reserve this week released a more detailed version of its proposal to create a “skinny” master account — a limited path for fintech and crypto firms to access Fed payment rails without becoming full, OCC‑chartered banks. The release came just days after President Donald Trump signed two executive orders: one pushing federal agencies to better integrate digital assets into existing payment systems, and another directing the Treasury and regulators to tighten Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) enforcement. Why this matters These moves together could meaningfully accelerate crypto firms’ access to the core U.S. payments system — a long‑standing industry objective — while also signaling a stronger enforcement posture on illicit finance risks tied to new payments technologies. How the Fed, Treasury and Congress act next will determine whether integration comes with clearer guardrails or heavier compliance burdens. What the Fed proposed - The Fed’s update expands on a request for information first published in December 2025. It outlines how a “skinny” master account could let non‑bank fintechs and crypto firms plug into Fed payment rails without being full member banks. - The proposal also asks member banks to evaluate whether they can independently provide payment accounts to such firms, and it requests feedback on operational, risk and legal considerations. - The Fed emphasized that it cannot necessarily implement every aspect unilaterally; some elements may require Congressional legislation to define which entities qualify for accounts. What Trump’s executive orders do - Order 1: Directs federal regulators to review and update existing rules so crypto and fintech firms can better integrate with payment systems. The Fed, in particular, was asked to reassess access for uninsured depository institutions. - Order 2: Targets Bank Secrecy Act enforcement. It directs Treasury and regulators to issue guidance and an advisory aimed at cracking down on illicit cross‑border finance and other abuses. The text singles out payroll tax evasion, shell companies and the strategic use of unregistered money services businesses, third‑party payment processors or peer‑to‑peer platforms to facilitate “off‑the‑books” wage payments that bypass BSA reporting or tax obligations. Potential scope and concerns - The BSA guidance does not explicitly name crypto or DeFi platforms, but experts warn the rules could sweep in many digital asset services. Nicholas Anthony, a Cato Institute research fellow, noted that Treasury’s broad authority under the BSA gives it discretion to apply guidance widely — potentially to crypto firms and decentralized platforms. - Industry participants will be watching how narrowly or broadly Treasury defines problematic conduct and which types of entities are targeted. The legislative calendar and political headwinds - Congress could be called on to fill gaps the Fed cannot lawfully bridge, but the Senate’s calendar is crowded. The Senate Banking Committee recently advanced the Clarity Act, and leadership had hoped for floor action soon. - Timing is tight: there are 19 working days in June, 15 in July and only five in August before the long summer hiatus. The Senate also faces high‑priority items that may squeeze available floor time, including reconciliation bills, a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act renewal expiring mid‑June, and potentially a housing bill. - Complicating negotiations, the Homeland Security funding reconciliation stalled after debate over controversial White House funding requests — including $1 billion previously sought for an East Wing ballroom and a separate $1.8 billion proposal critics called a “weaponization fund.” Those disputes have reduced bandwidth for other legislative priorities, including crypto‑related measures and ethics provisions tied to market structure legislation. Bottom line The Fed’s updated skinny master account proposal and the White House’s executive actions together mark a consequential week for crypto’s path into the U.S. payments system. Firms may get a clearer route to the Fed’s rails, but any expanded access will come alongside renewed enforcement focus — and some outcomes likely depend on what Congress and Treasury ultimately decide. Stay tuned for developments as agencies convert these proposals into guidance and as Congress wrestles with competing priorities this summer. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news
