The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency lifted its consent order against cryptocurrency-focused bank Anchorage Digital Bank Thursday after more than three years.
Anchorage Digital had been under the consent order, which addressed compliance issues related to its anti-money laundering program, for nearly three-quarters of its time as a chartered national trust bank.
The 2022 consent order alleged that Anchorage Digital had failed to adopt and implement compliance measures that adequately covered Bank Secrecy Act/AML program requirements. The bank lacked internal controls for customer due diligence and procedures for monitoring suspicious activity, the OCC alleged.
Now, “the OCC believes that the safety and soundness of the Bank and its compliance with laws and regulations does not require the continued existence of the Order,” the regulator wrote.
Following the termination, Anchorage Digital co-founder and CEO Nathan McCauley published a letter detailing the firm’s compliance efforts.
The 1,681 days McCauley counted between receiving an OCC charter and having its consent order lifted “are not defined by a single regulatory action, but rather by the hundreds of thousands of man-hours in risk and regulatory specialization, tens of millions of dollars in compliance infrastructure investment, hundreds of dedicated meetings with our regulator, dozens of expert hires, and annual OCC exams — all in service of the nation’s first-of-its-kind federal banking charter,” he wrote.
“With our consent order lifted, we’ve proven definitively that crypto and federal oversight are not mutually exclusive — and can in fact be stronger working in tandem,” he wrote.
Anchorage Digital is the only crypto firm with a national trust bank charter. But that may change this year, as several others – Paxos, Fidelity Digital Assets, Ripple and Circle – have applied for the charter to take advantage of the Trump administration’s crypto-friendly stance.
The OCC and other regulatory agencies have done an about-face on crypto since the presidential administration changed hands in January. The Federal Reserve, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and OCC have all withdrawn Biden-era guidance relating to banks’ engagement in the crypto realm, including a 2023 joint statement warning about crypto’s “key risks.”