Federal Reserve Unveils Plans to Reduce Capital Rules Imposed After 2008 Crisis
- On Monday, the Federal Reserve officially removed reputational risk from bank examinations, aligning with FDIC and OCC to facilitate crypto industry access.
- Following 2023 crypto bank collapses, over 30 firms faced debanking amid critics’ 'Operation Chokepoint 2.0' and lawmakers’ calls for clearer digital asset rules.
- The source statements do not support the claim that Bitcoin surged over 5% or that crypto market cap rose nearly 3%, so the market reaction detail is inaccurate and should be removed.
- Federal Reserve's removal of reputational risk from bank exams enables banks to serve crypto firms more freely, aligning with industry advocates' calls for less subjective oversight.
- The Fed's removal of reputational risk from bank exams, aligned with FDIC and OCC moves, may soon enable banks to more readily serve crypto firms, pending examiner retraining.
136 Articles
136 Articles

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The US central bank is looking back at a regulation introduced after the subprime crisis in 2008 to solidify the balance sheet of large banks. The aim is to boost the bond market and lower interest rates.
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