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For over a decade, banks have had one major structural advantage over crypto firms: direct access to the Fed's payment plumbing. That changed Wednesday.
Most people have never heard of Fedwire. But every time a large sum of money moves between U.S. banks — a mortgage settlement, a wire transfer, a major institutional trade — there's a good chance it flows through this system. Access requires a Federal Reserve master account, which has historically been reserved for licensed banks and credit unions.
Kraken Financial, the Wyoming-chartered banking arm of crypto exchange Kraken, was granted one on Wednesday by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City — the first such approval ever given to a digital asset company. Until now, Kraken had to route dollar transfers through intermediary banks, adding cost, time, and dependency. Now it can settle payments directly.
Kraken spent more than five years in regulatory review to get here. Another Wyoming-chartered crypto bank, Custodia, pursued the same access and lost its case in federal court, with judges upholding the Fed's right to deny the application. Kraken's approval isn't just a business win — it's a signal that the regulatory environment has genuinely shifted.
Senator Cynthia Lummis, who chairs the Senate Banking Subcommittee on Digital Assets and has pushed for Kraken's approval for years, called it "a watershed moment for the digital asset industry."
The account comes with limits. Kraken won't earn interest on reserves or access the Fed's emergency lending facilities — privileges available to traditional banks. But direct Fedwire access alone is a significant competitive upgrade.
The timing is notable. The same day Kraken got its Fed account, Trump publicly attacked banks for blocking crypto legislation and met privately with Coinbase's CEO. Washington's posture toward crypto has shifted fast, and the industry is moving to lock in structural advantages while it can.
Kraken's parent company Payward filed confidentially for a U.S. IPO in November. A Fed master account makes that story considerably easier to tell to public market investors.
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