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Banks Get Green Light to Enter Crypto Flows — What’s Next for Crypto Infrastructure?

In December 2025, the U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) made the call to allow banks to act as intermediaries in crypto transactions. For the first time, banks are being explicitly allowed to sit inside the transaction flow itself. Not just as custodians or compliance gatekeepers, but as intermediaries that facilitate execution.

This is a notable step forward, and it fits with the broader regulatory trend we’ve been observing in the U.S. for some time now. Crypto is being increasingly moved out of the grey zone and into supervised, bank-compatible infrastructure. Throughout 2025, the country’s regulators have been taking steps to clarify how incumbents can interact with digital assets, instead of still trying to keep them at arm’s length.

The message is clear: crypto activity isn’t going away, and the goal now is to integrate it into the existing financial framework with guardrails. From this point of view, allowing banks to act as intermediaries lowers a prominent psychological and operational barrier. Banks can now actively facilitate trades, while remaining within a regulated, risk-controlled model.

This shift is going to have a long-reaching effect on how the entire crypto infrastructure evolves next.

What Does This Mean for Adoption and Everyday Users

From an adoption standpoint, this is an obvious positive. For years, one of crypto’s biggest challenges has been onboarding users who are not crypto-native. For many people, the friction starts the moment they have to leave their familiar banking environment and interact directly with an exchange or on-ramp service they don’t fully understand or trust.

If banks can now intermediate crypto transactions, that journey becomes much simpler. Digital assets start to look less like a “separate universe” and more like a natural extension of digital finance. This is a good way to bring in users who are not crypto “natives,” but are interested in exploring this asset class. These people tend to be more comfortable using banking apps and cards, so enabling access through those familiar platforms arms them with greater confidence.

Institutional Confidence Follows Proven Infrastructure

Institutional comfort is another aspect where the familiarity of traditional banking structures serves as a positive addition to the crypto adoption process.

Large asset managers, corporates, and wealth clients tend to move when infrastructure feels stable, audited, and predictable. Banks provide exactly that: by stepping into the execution flow, they effectively act as a bridge between traditional capital and crypto liquidity.

This could unlock new institutional flows, especially from parties who were previously hesitant to step into the crypto landscape due to operational and regulatory uncertainty. Over time, we are likely to see more consistent participation and deeper liquidity growing from OCC’s decision.

How Compliance Issues Will Be Tackled

I have previously observed a prominent worry from some industry participants that bringing banks deeper into the crypto flows will mean a drastic increase in compliance and operational burdens across the board.

In reality, however, the shift won’t be as big as many might assume. The majority of properly licensed crypto businesses are already highly compliant and operate on a level close to bank-grade standards. There will likely have to be certain adjustments, but nothing a good fintech cannot adapt to.

This will make forming partnerships between the two camps much smoother and seamless. For mature, well-regulated crypto firms, this will simply be a natural extension of systems that they already run.

Why Bank–Exchange Partnerships Become Inevitable

All of this leads to one clear conclusion: closer cooperation between banks and crypto platforms brings a sense of greater legitimacy and scale, and it also pushes the crypto industry to mature operationally.

I believe that, as this paradigm evolves and stabilizes, we are going to see a kind of convergence. Banks will move deeper into crypto markets, while crypto firms will step further into the banking space. As the overarching financial infrastructure continues to change, the lines will become more blurred.

Some banks will undoubtedly seek to acquire crypto capabilities, while crypto platforms will pursue banking-style products and licenses. The biggest winners will be those players who can pivot quickly and adapt their business models to operate comfortably across both worlds.

If done right, this model can realistically benefit everyone. Users get easier access, institutions get familiar risk frameworks, banks get new revenue streams, and crypto platforms gain stability and scale.

The OCC’s decision doesn’t mean crypto suddenly becomes simple or risk-free. What it does mean is that the industry is entering a new phase of adoption where banks, crypto firms, and regulators are collaborating to build workable models together.

Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cryptonews.com. This article is for informational purposes only and should not be construed as investment or financial advice.

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