Powell made the statement during his semiannual monetary policy report testimony before the House Financial Services Committee on June 24, reinforcing recent steps by federal regulators to remove barriers that have long restricted crypto’s access to traditional banking.
The coordinated policy shift eliminates a broad and often opaque reason that examiners have used to deny banking services to crypto firms or prevent banks from offering services like Bitcoin trading or custody.
Under the updated guidance, Fed staff will be retrained to implement the changes uniformly across all supervised institutions and will coordinate with peer agencies to ensure consistent oversight.
Powell laid the groundwork for this approach earlier in April when he called on Congress to establish clear stablecoin rules and pledged that the Fed does not intend to interfere with lawful relationships between banks and crypto companies.
He has since noted that while regulators took a cautious posture following the 2022 crypto market turmoil, some guidance may now be relaxed to support “responsible innovation” as long as banks maintain strong risk controls.
Industry participants have welcomed the removal of reputational risk and the Fed’s clear position as a milestone for integrating digital assets into the regulated financial system. Banks are expected to expand offerings ranging from basic accounts to crypto custody, payments, and settlement services.
Despite this regulatory openness, Powell also told lawmakers that the Fed still expects to consider cutting interest rates later this year, even though internal forecasts suggest inflation could remain elevated, an outlook that some economists say may confuse markets and cloud the broader policy picture.
Regulators have not provided a timeline for further guidance but have stressed that legal, liquidity and credit risk standards remain firmly in place as banks scale up crypto-related activities.