- April 18, 2026
- Posted by: admin
- Category: BitCoin, Blockchain, Cryptocurrency, Investments
For most of its life, crypto lived outside the financial system. If you wanted to move dollars in or out of an exchange, that money still had to pass through a regular bank somewhere along the way. Most people assumed it would stay that way until Washington finally decided how to regulate it.
But that assumption is now breaking down. In March 2026, a regional Federal Reserve bank approved a limited account for Kraken, the first time a crypto exchange has ever been allowed to plug directly into the US central bank’s payment system. More approvals could follow, and the GENIUS Act, passed last year, has cleared a path for ordinary banks to start issuing their own digital dollars.
None of this needed a sweeping “crypto law”: it was a series of smaller, technical decisions that have added up and changed the picture entirely.
Crypto may not be waiting for permission anymore. It may already be finding a way in.
What a “backdoor into the system” actually means
The US financial system runs on a set of payment networks operated by the Federal Reserve. Banks use them to move money between each other, settle transactions at the end of the day, and tap dollar liquidity when they need it. The most important, called Fedwire, moves trillions of dollars between banks every single day.
To use those networks, an institution needs an account at the Fed, which was historically reserved for licensed banks. Everyone else had to rent access by going through a partner bank that already had one.
That’s what just changed. Kraken’s banking unit now has its own direct line into the Fed’s payment system, without routing dollars through another bank first. The account is limited, which means it won’t have interest on reserves or access to the Fed’s emergency lending, but it lets Kraken settle its own dollar transactions on the same infrastructure banks use.
Think of the difference this way: instead of using a third-party app to talk to your bank, you have your own connection to the bank’s back end. Faster, cheaper, and no longer dependent on a middleman that can say no.
For years, US crypto policy has moved slowly, pulled between agencies that didn’t agree on the basics. At the same time, demand for crypto services from big institutional investors hasn’t gone away. They want cleaner, regulated ways to touch the asset class.
So the system is adapting practically, not politically.
The GENIUS Act gave digital dollars their first real federal rulebook and effectively invited regulated banks into the market. Regulators began handing out special charters that let nonbank firms like Circle operate with bank-like privileges.
The Fed opened a public comment period on a lighter-weight account designed for payment-focused firms. Wyoming’s crypto-friendly bank charter, once treated as an experimental oddity, became the legal vehicle that carried Kraken through the door.
All of this means that your bank’s exposure to digital assets is going up, either through partners, products, or its own tokens. Citi has said it’s targeting a 2026 launch of crypto custody. A group of major global banks, including JPMorgan, Bank of America, and Goldman Sachs, has explored a jointly-backed digital dollar. Even if you never buy crypto, it will now sit on the edges of the account you already have.
This comes with quite a few risks for markets, though. When the pipes between crypto and traditional finance get wider and shorter, money moves faster in both directions, and so do shocks.
For crypto, direct access to payment systems is a stamp of legitimacy that would have been unthinkable a few years ago. But it also means it loses the “outside the system” identity that defined it, and takes on some of the same responsibilities.
The more connected crypto becomes, the less isolated its risks are.
The real tension: stability or contagion for crypto?
One view (call it the normalization case) is that pulling crypto inside the regulated perimeter makes everyone safer. Companies with direct Fed access have to meet stricter standards, and reserves get easier to monitor. This is a net positive for users, as they end up with fewer opaque middlemen between their dollars and the exchange. When seen through this lens, integration reduces risk rather than creating it.
The other view is hard to ignore, as the scares from the 2008 financial crisis are still fresh for many.
The US banking lobby reacted to the Kraken decision by warning that lightly regulated companies like this with direct access to the payment system introduce all kinds of money-laundering and operational risks. However, they would also open a Pandora’s box of new risks: in a panic, money could actually flood into these new accounts, draining deposits from the community banks and credit unions that fund the real economy.
The Bank Policy Institute, representing the country’s largest banks, said the approval happened before the Fed Board had even finished writing its own rulebook for these accounts.
The question underneath this fight is pretty simple: if crypto becomes part of the system, does it make the system stronger or more fragile?
Financial crises are rarely about the risk everyone is watching. They’re a result of the connections no one modeled, and many believe that the new direct connection between crypto markets and the Fed’s payment rails is exactly that kind of linkage.
The subtle part
Part of what makes a huge shift like this hard to see is that nobody is announcing it as one.
There’s no press conference where “crypto joins the banking system,” because there doesn’t need to be. A regional Fed approval here, a stablecoin rulebook there, and a charter granted to a firm most people have never heard of.
Each of these items is boring on its own terms, which is why they clear without the kind of political fight that most comprehensive crypto laws have been stuck in for years.
More crypto firms will almost certainly follow Kraken once the Fed finalizes its lighter-weight account framework, and the approvals will be granted one at a time, in different Federal Reserve districts, with conditions that take pages of legal language to unpack.
Big banks will keep rolling out custody services and their own digital dollars as ordinary product launches, not ideological statements, while the Kraken cybersecurity incident this spring (an extortion attempt built around insider access) hands the banking lobby exactly the kind of material it needs to argue that lightly regulated firms shouldn’t be sitting on the same rails as JPMorgan.
A comprehensive crypto market-structure law may still pass, and probably will eventually, but by the time it does, the thing it’s meant to govern will already have been built around it, and the interesting question will no longer be what the rules say but how much of the system has stopped needing them.
The post Crypto to enter the US banking system through a backdoor, not through regulation appeared first on CryptoSlate.
