Daily Camera (Boulder)

Federal agencies, states vie to be fintech regulator

- By Steven Harras

Cq-roll Call

A federal banking regulator’s grant of the first national trust bank charter to a cryptocurr­ency startup may touch off a turf war over which agency is best suited to oversee the burgeoning financial technology market.

The Office of the Comptrolle­r of the Currency, a unit of the Treasury Department, on Jan. 13 approved South Dakota-based Anchorage Digital Bank NA to hold cryptocurr­encies for customers, making it the first federally regulated bank for digital assets such as Bitcoin.

The approval came just days after a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau task force released a 900-page report that recommende­d Congress authorize the CFPB to issue national licenses to certain fintech firms.

Sanford M. Brown, a former OCC attorney who is now a partner with Alston & Bird’s financial ser vices practice group in Dallas, said the task force’s suggestion­s came “out of the blue,” given that OCC has previously laid the groundwork for fintech licensing. OCC, which oversees the majority of U.S. banks, has issued other types of fintech licenses and launched efforts to promote domestic fintech advances.

Brown and others say the OCC’S action and the CFPB’S ambitions put those agencies at odds with each other and with state financial regulators, who say they have primary jurisdicti­on over fintech firms within their borders.

The OCC’S approval means that Anchorage Digital won’t need authorizat­ion from financial regulators in each individual state. Prior to the approval, the company was licensed in South Dakota to hold client cash deposits and cryptocurr­ency. Its customers are primarily institutio­nal investors that transact in digital assets, including Bitcoin, Bitcoin Cash, Ethereum, Zcash and Filecoin.

Just who wins the fight for authority of licensing oversight could be decided by Congress. The CFPB task force said lawmakers should shed more light on the OCC’S authority to grant char ters to nonbank fintechs.

“If Congress elects not to authorize the Bureau to issue federal licenses, it should clarify that the OCC has that authority,” the

Cfpb-appointed panel said. “This alternativ­e option would ensure that fintechs operating nationwide companies are subject to a single set of laws.”

The task force’s recommenda­tion ignited a debate among regulators, attorneys and industry observers about the role of the federal government in licensing fintechs and which agency should be in charge.

Alston & Bird’s Brown says there is merit to having one federal agency in charge of char tering fintechs that operate nationwide rather than requiring those firms to obtain 50 separate state licenses. The OCC as a national regulator is better suited for that job than the CFPB, which plays a much smaller role in bank super - vision, he said.

The OCC has taken significan­t steps over the past few years to issue national fintech charters, efforts dating to the Obama administra­tion to come up with a viable federal charter system. State financial regulators have sued the agency, claiming it is oversteppi­ng its powers. Those suits are pending.

The comptrolle­r’s of fice balked at the CFPB task force’s suggestion. The day after the task force report came out, then-acting Comptrolle­r Brian P. Brooks said that the nation needs federal charters for fintechs to effectivel­y serve the financial needs of consumers under a single set of rules, and that the OCC is best prepared to issue such licenses.

Brooks said federal law gives the OCC the power to grant national charters to companies engaged in lending, payments or deposit-taking.

“In its wisdom, Congress in the Dodd-frank Act separated chartering and prudential supervisio­n from consumer protection enforcemen­t, assigning chartering authority to the OCC and specific consumer protection enforcemen­t authority to the CFPB,” he said. “The additional protection­s implemente­d following the last financial crisis put two cops on the beat and separated those responsibi­lities so neither would be compromise­d in ser vice to the other. That dynamic should be preser ved.”

Brooks stepped down as acting comptrolle­r on Jan. 14.

The Conference of State Bank Super visors, which has taken the OCC to court over its plans to issue national fintech charters, was also critical of the CFPB task force’s report, albeit for different reasons.

In a statement to CQ Roll Call, CSBS President John W. Ryan said the report and its recommenda­tions “fail to recognize the critical role that state regulators play in protecting consumers and facilitati­ng safe innovation.” He said the suggestion of a federal fintech license under the guise of consumer protection is particular­ly troublesom­e, adding that a national license “would prioritize convenienc­e for a few establishe­d players over consumer protection, innovation and a level playing field.”

An attorney who closely monitors regulators’ approach to fintechs, Norman H. Roos, said in an inter view that the OCC “is the chartering authority at the national level. Why bring in another agency? It is counterint­uitive.”

 ?? Olivier Douliery / Getty Images ?? An exterior view of the building of U.S. Department of the Treasury in Washington, D.C. on March 27, 2020.
Olivier Douliery / Getty Images An exterior view of the building of U.S. Department of the Treasury in Washington, D.C. on March 27, 2020.

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