

The crypto industry’s inability to access banking services still
concerns many industry observers despite recent policy
victories.
In past years, financial services firms and banks concerned
about fiduciary risk, reporting liabilities and reputational risk
often would refuse to offer service to crypto firms — i.e.,
“debanking” them.
Legislative efforts in the United States and Australia are
attempting to remove these barriers for the crypto industry. In the
former, legislators repealed guidelines that made it difficult for
banks to custody crypto assets, as well as those stating that
crypto carried “reputational risk” for banks. In the latter, the
Labor Party has introduced a bill to create a legal framework for
crypto, giving banks the clarity they need to interact with the
crypto industry.
Despite these tangible efforts, some crypto industry observers
say that the crypto’s debanking problem is far from
over.
US crypto execs say debanking is still an issue
The crypto industry has long decried “Operation Chokepoint 2.0,”
its nickname for a suite of policies that they claim constrained
the crypto industry from growing under the administration of former
President Joe Biden. Among these were measures making it more
difficult for crypto firms to access banking services.
The early days of the second administration of President Donald
Trump have seen many of these repealed or changed. One of the first
was the repeal of Staff
Accounting Bulletin 121, which required banks offering custody
for customers’ cryptocurrencies to list them as liabilities on
their balance sheets — this made it very difficult for banks to
justify offering such services.
The administration also appointed a new head of the Office of
the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), Rodney Hood. Dennis Porter,
CEO of the Bitcoin-focused policy organization Satoshi Action, told
Cointelegraph that under Hood’s tenure, the OCC has already said
banks can offer crypto-related services like custody, stablecoin
reserves and blockchain participation.
Related:
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industry
“This opens the door for broader adoption of digital asset
technology and custodial services by traditional financial
institutions, signaling a major shift in how banks engage with
crypto,” he said.
Despite these victories, Caitlin Long, founder and CEO of
Custodia Bank, said on March
21 that debanking is likely to remain a problem for crypto
firms into 2026.
Long said the non-partisan board of governors of the Federal
Reserve is “still controlled by Democrats,” alluding to Democrats’
more skeptical stance on crypto. Long claimed that “there are two
crypto-friendly banks under examination by the Fed right now, and
an army of examiners was sent into these banks, including the
examiners from Washington, a literal army just smothering the
banks.”
Long noted that Trump won’t be able to appoint a new Fed
governor until January, meaning that, while other agencies may be
more crypto-friendly, there are still roadblocks.
Australia’s Labor Party to create crypto framework
Stand With Crypto, the “grassroots” crypto advocacy organization
started by Coinbase that has spread to the US, UK, Canada and
Australia, said that “in Australia,
debanking is quietly shutting out innovators and entrepreneurs —
particularly in the crypto and blockchain space.”
In a post on X, the
organization claimed that debanking results in “reputational
damage, loss of revenue, increased operational costs, and inability
to launch or sustain services.” It also claimed that it forces some
companies to move offshore.
In response to these concerns, the ruling center-left Labor
Party in Australia has proposed a new set of laws for the
cryptocurrency industry. The changes to current financial services
law seek to tackle the issue of debanking in the country’s
cryptocurrency industry.
Australia’s Treasury says its new crypto regulations have
four priorities. Source:
Australian Department of the Treasury
Edward Carroll, head of global markets and corporate finance at MHC
Digital Group — an Australian crypto platform — told Cointelegraph
that in Australia, debanking decisions were “not the result of
regulatory directives.”
“Rather, they appear to stem from a more general sense of risk
aversion due to the current lack of a clear regulatory
framework.”
Related:
US gov’t actions give clue about upcoming crypto
regulation
Carroll was optimistic about the Labor Party’s proactive stance.
The major political parties were “showing a shift in sentiment and
a shared commitment to establishing formal crypto
regulation.”
“We are hopeful that this will give banks the confidence to
reengage with crypto businesses that meet compliance standards,” he
said.
Canada unlikely to relieve crypto firms
In Canada, “debanking remains a serious and ongoing challenge
for the Canadian crypto industry,” according to Morva Rohani,
executive director of the Canadian Web3 Council.
“While some firms have successfully established relationships
with banking partners, many continue to face account closures or
denials with little explanation or recourse,” she told
Cointelegraph.
While debanking actions aren’t explicit, financial institutions’
interpretation of Anti-Money Laundering and Know Your Customer
regulations “creates a risk-averse environment where banks weigh
compliance and reputational concerns against the relatively low
revenue potential of crypto clients.”
The end result, per Rohani, is a systemic debanking problem for
the digital assets industry.
But unlike in the US and Australia, the Canadian crypto industry
may not find relief anytime soon. Prime Minister Mark Carney, whose
more crypto-skeptic Liberal Party is surging in the polls ahead of
the April 28 snap elections, is himself a crypto-skeptic.
Polls show Carney firmly in the lead. Source:
Ipsos
Carney has stated that
the future of money lies more in a “central bank stablecoin,”
otherwise referred to as a central bank digital currency.
Rohani said that “no comprehensive legislative solution has been
implemented” as regards to debanking. “A more structured approach,
including mandated disclosure of reasons for account termination
and regulatory oversight, is needed,” she said.
Critics claim crypto is “hijacking” the debanking issue
There is another side to the debanking debate, which claims that
crypto’s debanking “problem” is a non-issue or a vehicle for crypto
firms to get what they want in terms of regulation.
Molly White, the author of Web3 Is Going Just Great and
the “Citation Needed” newsletter, has noted that, in the US at
least, crypto firms have claimed to be victims of debanking while
lauding Trump’s efforts to end protections for debanking at the
same time.
In a Feb. 14 post, White stated that
the crypto industry had “hijacked” the discussion around debanking,
which contains legitimate concerns regarding access to financial
services — particularly regarding discrimination due to race,
religious identity or industry affiliation.
She claims the crypto industry has used debanking as a means to
deflect legitimate regulatory inquiries into crypto companies’
compliance efforts.
Further of note is the fact that Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong
has applauded the efforts of the Department of Government
Efficiency (DOGE), with Elon Musk at the helm, to dismantle the
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB).
One of the CFPB’s responsibilities is to investigate claims of
debanking. But when DOGE instructed the agency to
halt all work, Armstrong said it was “100% the right call,” in
addition to making dubious claims about the agency’s
constitutionality.
In the meantime
Whether the industry’s debanking concerns stem from legitimate
discrimination or an attempt at regulatory capture, crypto firms
are developing solutions in the interim.
Porter said that, as an alternative to banking services, “many
crypto companies have leaned on stablecoins as a primary tool for
managing finances,” while others have worked with “smaller regional
banks or specialized trust companies open to digital assets.”
Rohani said that this kind of “patchwork of relationships” can
increase operational costs and risks and are “not sustainable
long-term solutions for growth or to build a competitive, regulated
industry.”
Porter concluded that the banking workarounds could actually
strengthen the industry’s position, stating that they may “continue
evolving into fully integrated relationships with traditional
financial institutions, further cementing crypto’s place in
mainstream finance.”
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