The Bank for International Settlements just put a new label on crypto exchanges.
The BIS, often called the central bank for central banks, said major crypto exchanges are working as "shadow banks." That is a tough phrase from one of the most watched global rule-setters.
The group called for more rules on reserves, customer assets, and clear disclosure.
What A Shadow Bank Is
A shadow bank is a firm that does bank-like tasks with no bank license. That means taking cash, making loans, or holding user funds with a promise to pay them back.
These firms are not covered by the same rules banks are. They do not carry the same safety checks. They are not backed by a deposit safety net.
The term was made big after the 2008 crash. Many firms that looked like banks were not. That gap sat at the heart of the crisis.
What The BIS Flagged
The BIS listed three main risks.
First, a time gap. Exchanges take short-term user funds but put them in long-term assets.
Second, asset mixing. User coins can get pooled with firm-owned coins in ways that are hard to untangle.
Third, murky reserves. Some exchanges share how much they hold. The math is not always easy to check from outside.
Why The BIS Matters
The BIS does not set rules on its own. But its reports shape what central banks and state rule-makers do next.
When the BIS uses the shadow bank label, it is a signal. Rule-makers in the US, UK, and EU are likely to lean on the same frame when they write new crypto rules.
That is why crypto firms watch BIS papers closely.
What This Means For Users
For users, the main risk is what happens if an exchange runs into trouble. Coin balances at an exchange are not safe in the same way bank cash is.
A firm in trouble can halt withdrawals, as FTX did in 2022. That fear is what the BIS points at when it uses the label.
Users who spread their coins across self-held wallets and licensed sites carry less of that risk.
What Exchanges Will Say
Big exchanges will push back on the label. They will point to proof-of-reserve reports, third-party audits, and licensed arms.
That pushback is fair in parts and weak in others. Proof-of-reserve shows what an exchange holds. It does not always show what it owes.
The BIS is saying the same thing in a blunt way. That gap is where the risk lives.
The Rule-Writing Signal
Watch three places in the coming quarters. The US Treasury, the UK FCA, and the EU MiCA team are all reviewing crypto rules right now.
Each will read the BIS report. Each may tighten user-asset rules, reserve rules, or both.
For crypto firms, that means more cost to run. For users, it should mean better safety over time.
How Bank Rules Could Apply
Bank rules are built around three ideas. Hold enough cash to pay back user deposits, keep clear books, and limit how much risk you can take.
If crypto firms get held to even some of those rules, the cost to run an exchange goes up. Fees may rise. Weaker firms may close or merge.
That is the trade-off. Safer for users, tougher for firms.
Worth Noting
The BIS has pushed a crypto-skeptic line for years. This paper is the sharpest framing yet.
The rule-makers have their cue.
