A three-month-old U.S. bank just walked into one of the most sanctioned countries in the world.
Erebor Bank, the Peter Thiel-backed startup based in Columbus, Ohio, told Venezuelan officials it can connect their banks to the U.S. financial system, even though most global lenders won't touch the country.
Who Erebor Is
Erebor is named after the treasure mountain in The Hobbit. It got conditional approval from the OCC in October 2025, conditional approval for FDIC deposit insurance in December 2025, and a full national bank charter in February 2026.
In its first seven weeks of operation, the bank pulled in $1.1 billion in deposits, mostly from crypto and tech-focused customers who lost their main bank when Silicon Valley Bank collapsed in 2023.
The bank also positioned itself to hold stablecoins and serve venture-backed startups, and its latest fundraise reportedly valued it at $4.35 billion.
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The Venezuela Pitch
Erebor offered to arrange correspondent banking lines with Venezuelan banks and set up sub-accounts for their clients, which would let local Venezuelan firms open U.S. accounts and move money more easily through the U.S. financial system.
For Venezuela, this is a lifeline. The country has been cut off from most of the global banking system because of U.S. sanctions, leaving its companies and individuals struggling to make basic dollar payments abroad.
For Erebor, it is a high-risk play in a market that most major banks have spent the last decade walking away from.
The pitch was made directly to top Venezuelan officials, which means it has at least some political backing on the Caracas side of the deal.
The Compliance Risk
The U.S. still has sanctions in place against Venezuela and against specific individuals and companies tied to the Maduro government, so any bank moving money in or out has to clear strict screens to avoid touching sanctioned parties.
Erebor's pitch suggests that the bank thinks it can build a compliant pipeline, but the political and legal exposure is real.
The bank is also operating under a regulatory leash that requires it to maintain a tier 1 leverage ratio of at least 12% for its first three years and notify its primary regulator before making any major change to its business plan.
That makes a Venezuela strategy not just a compliance question but a question of how patient federal regulators are willing to be with a brand-new bank.
What To Watch
Erebor has spent its first three months chasing the kind of customers other banks won't take, and Venezuela is the most extreme example yet.
The next sanctions decision out of Washington will tell the bank how much room it actually has to operate.
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