While Bank of America and JPMorgan are still figuring out how to handle crypto, a 40-year-old Dallas bank just got the green light to run the rails for it.
United Texas Bank finished its switch to a national charter on May 27, two weeks after the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) signed off. That makes it one of the first banks to pull off the move in 15 years.
The bank isn't a household name. But crypto firms know it well - UTB moves roughly $120 billion a year in transactions for them.
What the Charter Unlocks
The new charter puts UTB on the same federal footing as JPMorgan and Bank of America. That means full trust powers, FDIC insurance, and the part that matters most for crypto: direct access to the Federal Reserve's wire and ACH (Automated Clearing House) systems - the rails banks use to move money around fast.
That's the door most crypto-native firms have been locked out of. Trust-only charters - like the ones Anchorage and Paxos hold - don't come with Fed payment rails, so UTB just walked in the front.
The bank already clears around $10 billion a month in dollar volume for foreign banks, OTC desks (over-the-counter trading firms), and major exchanges. With Fed access stacked on top, it's setting itself up as the bridge between offshore crypto and the U.S. banking system.
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Filling the Silvergate Hole
When Silvergate and Signature Bank collapsed in 2023, crypto lost its 24/7 settlement system. Suddenly, big traders trying to move dollars at 3 a.m. were running into closed banks and stalled wires.
UTB is launching a product called Atomic to fill that gap. It's an AI-driven payment network built to clear transactions between big clients off-balance-sheet, around the clock.
There's a compliance layer too. A system called Prism Sentinel runs blockchain monitoring in real time, built to handle the anti-money-laundering rules that have tripped up other crypto-friendly banks.
UTB itself was operating under a Federal Reserve Consent Order on those exact issues until recently - making the new charter both a green light and a clean slate.
What to Watch
A digital asset custody arm and full-service trust department are slated for this summer, which would round out the stack - payments, custody, and compliance under one federal charter.
The bigger question is whether UTB's model gets copied. Minnesota just passed a law last week letting local banks offer crypto custody, and the pattern is starting to look familiar: regional banks moving on crypto plumbing faster than the Wall Street giants.
The rails are getting built. They're just not getting built where most investors are looking.
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