Articles
Crypto Market Analysis

Federal court ends Custodia Bank's legal bid for a master account

User Image

От Анонимный

Создано March 14, 2026|2 мин. чтения
Main Image

One judge sided with Custodia Bank, stating that a master account is “indispensable” for a bank’s day-to-day operations and being denied one is “akin to a death sentence.”

A US federal court has rejected Custodia Bank’s final attempt to challenge the Federal Reserve’s authority over granting master accounts — effectively ending the crypto-focused bank’s five-year-long battle for direct access to the central bank’s payment system.

The US Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit said in a filing on Friday that it wouldn’t hear Custodia's final appeal on that point in a 7-3 vote.

Custodia first applied for a master account in October 2020, which allows financial institutions to hold reserves directly at the Federal Reserve and access its payment rails, enabling them to settle transactions without relying on intermediary banks.

After the Fed rejected its master account application, Custodia turned to the courts, arguing the Monetary Control Act entitles state-chartered banks to access Fed services and therefore a master account.

However, the multiple courts have now ruled that the Fed retains discretion over whether to grant master accounts.

Custodia’s blow comes as Kraken became the first crypto platform to receive a master account from the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City on March 4.

Kraken’s master account enables it to connect to the Fedwire payments system, though it does not include the full range of services available to traditional banks.

The move raised hopes that US regulators could offer “skinny” or limited master accounts to crypto firms.

While only three judges sided with Custodia, one of them, Judge Timothy Tymkovich, wrote a strong dissenting opinion, stating that “a master account is ‘indispensable’ for a bank’s operations” and being denied one is “akin to a death sentence.”

Related: Democrats say they will oversee reported DOJ probe into Binance 

He noted that three months after Custodia’s application in October 2020, the Fed said Custodia was eligible and told it there were “no showstoppers” with its application. 

He added, “I do not agree that Reserve Banks have discretion over account applications and would have allowed the mandamus claim to go forward.”

Magazine: Clarity Act risks repeat of Europe’s mistakes, crypto lawyer warns

Source: CoinTelegraph


Другие статьи, опубликованные недавно

EUR trading accounts for 1% of Binance spot volume, CryptoQuant says
EUR trading accounts for 1% of Binance spot volume, CryptoQuant says

Trading Strategies

Euro-denominated trading accounts for around 1% of Binance's spot volume, according to CryptoQuant d...

Strategy adds $300M to USD Reserve, acquires 520 BTC
Strategy adds $300M to USD Reserve, acquires 520 BTC

Bitcoin

Michael Saylor’s Strategy boosted its USD Reserve to $1.4 billion and added 520 Bitcoin, funded th...

Social trading platform Fomo raises $75M, reaches $550M valuation
Social trading platform Fomo raises $75M, reaches $550M valuation

Trading Strategies

The Series B round values the social trading and token discovery platform at $550 million as crypto ...

Enso launches RWA app and trading for over 500 tokenized assets
Enso launches RWA app and trading for over 500 tokenized assets

Trading Strategies

Enso launched access to over 500 tokenized assets and US stocks, citing a growing demand for US equi...

Why Google search can be a crypto wallet risk
Why Google search can be a crypto wallet risk

Crypto Market Analysis

Think your wallet is safe? A major crypto risk may start with a Google search and one wrong click.So...

Bitcoin price taps $65.5K as Iran deal sees oil drop toward 16-week low
Bitcoin price taps $65.5K as Iran deal sees oil drop toward 16-week low

Bitcoin

Bitcoin sought a breakout toward a potential BTC price target near $70,000 as Iran news sent oil tow...