【CoinDesk】The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) recently issued an interpretive letter opening the door for nationwide banks to participate in crypto asset trading—clearly stating that banks engaging in riskless activities related to crypto trading are considered legitimate banking activities and can operate as trading intermediaries.
This policy has attracted industry attention. Jake, a senior executive at well-known OTC market maker Wintermute, offered a key insight: the process of bank participation in crypto trading fundamentally differs from traditional proprietary trading.
Specifically, the operational logic for banks is as follows—after purchasing crypto assets from clients, they immediately transfer the positions to liquidity providers (LPs). These seemingly simple two steps conceal some nuances. Technologically, banks only hold ownership of these assets within an extremely short window, with the sole purpose of completing trade matching. In other words, they do not actually stockpile inventory nor bear the risk of price fluctuations.
From an economic perspective, this model is a standard brokerage activity. Banks act as matchmakers—connecting buyers and sellers, charging commissions, but never holding positions or making autonomous trading decisions. This boundary is quite clear.
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SatoshiChallenger
· 9h ago
Interestingly, OCC's move is like issuing a "passport" to banks, but upon closer inspection of Jake's explanation... well, essentially it's just quick in and out. Data shows that after each regulatory relaxation, the irrational arbitrage window in the market is fiercely exploited, and historical lessons tell us this is not a good thing.
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AirdropGrandpa
· 9h ago
The bank's approach is just "one hand in, one hand out," so sneaky... But this method indeed reduces risk, but doesn't liquidity become the new bottleneck?
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SelfCustodyIssues
· 9h ago
Is a bank just a delivery guy? Takes it and turns around, tsk tsk, that risk transfer is really slick. But it still feels a bit虚 (虚 means "虚" in Chinese, which can mean "虚" or "虚" in context, but since the instruction is to translate all text content, and "虚" is part of the original text, it should be kept as is). When the price surge moment truly arrives, can this "extremely短暂的窗口" (extremely short window) be reliable?
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GweiWatcher
· 9h ago
Banks are just middlemen, making a profit from the spread. Their mindset is completely different from ours of hoarding coins.
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SchrodingerProfit
· 9h ago
This move by the bank is just "working mode": they come in and flip it quickly, shifting the risk to LPs, and pocket the spread... Isn't this just traditional finance in a different shell? True coin hoarders are the real gamblers.
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FadCatcher
· 9h ago
Banks are just acting as intermediaries to earn the spread, with no real risk... This way, regulators can rest assured.
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OnchainHolmes
· 9h ago
Banks acting as intermediaries are just passing the buck, avoiding risks themselves and making money from fees. This trick has been played out long ago.
Bank of America enters crypto trading: Key differences between brokerage model and proprietary trading
【CoinDesk】The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) recently issued an interpretive letter opening the door for nationwide banks to participate in crypto asset trading—clearly stating that banks engaging in riskless activities related to crypto trading are considered legitimate banking activities and can operate as trading intermediaries.
This policy has attracted industry attention. Jake, a senior executive at well-known OTC market maker Wintermute, offered a key insight: the process of bank participation in crypto trading fundamentally differs from traditional proprietary trading.
Specifically, the operational logic for banks is as follows—after purchasing crypto assets from clients, they immediately transfer the positions to liquidity providers (LPs). These seemingly simple two steps conceal some nuances. Technologically, banks only hold ownership of these assets within an extremely short window, with the sole purpose of completing trade matching. In other words, they do not actually stockpile inventory nor bear the risk of price fluctuations.
From an economic perspective, this model is a standard brokerage activity. Banks act as matchmakers—connecting buyers and sellers, charging commissions, but never holding positions or making autonomous trading decisions. This boundary is quite clear.