Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio), the chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, told Acting Comptroller Michael Hsu that he is “concerned” about the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency’s (OCC) granting national trust charters to “financial and non-financial companies.”
Some of the companies seeking OCC charters are unable to meet the OCC’s regulatory requirements, Brown said in the open letter, first reported by Politico. The lawmaker specifically pointed to the three crypto companies that have secured conditional OCC trust charters in the past five months: Paxos, Protego and Anchorage.
These companies market their “federally-chartered status,” Brown said.
“In other words, these companies suggest that the OCC’s approval of their charters guarantees their business model is as safe, stable and dependable for customers as a local community bank,” Brown’s letter said, adding:
“The fact is, given the many uncertainties present in the digital asset landscape as identified by other regulators, the volatility of digital asset valuations, and the disproportionate influence individuals can have on entire cryptocurrency markets, the OCC is not in a position to regulate these entities comparably to traditional banks.”
Brown’s letter comes on a day of extreme volatility in the crypto market, with bitcoin falling close to $12,000 before rebounding nearly $8,000. Much of the market remains in the red over the past 24 hours.
Hsu, who took office barely two weeks ago, has already indicated that the OCC is reviewing how it approaches digital assets in testimony before the House Financial Services Committee earlier this week.
Importantly, the trust charters Anchorage, Protego and Paxos have are conditional. The OCC would have to grant a final trust charter after a number of months.
UPDATE (May 19, 22:01 UTC): Updated with additional context.