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đ€ Banks go brrr
Financial institutions are mulling their crypto debuts

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Every month, Blockworks publishes a disclosure page where you can track what folks around our company hold (if itâs a position over $5,000).
Yesterday, people around CT werenât too pleased to see that the editorial team maintains few positions in crypto. If you follow me on X, then you might have seen my response to this, but I wanted to share it with all of you given that you choose to wake up with the Empire newsletter every morning.
I started off on Wall Street, where I signed forms preventing me from owning any single stock. I no longer have those mandates in place at Blockworks, but I carry the belief that thereâs no way I can report on crypto without bias if I own anything. I donât even expose my personal stock portfolio to crypto firms.
My job is to objectively bring you news and insights, Iâm not here to pump my bags. And, hopefully, this newsletter informs your decisions. Thatâs all I can ask for.
Meanwhile:
Bitcoinâs trading around $81,000 after dipping to $76K overnight, marking a 2% decline in the past day.
Mt. Goxâs making moves⊠again. This time, it transferred $905 million of bitcoin to an unmarked wallet, per Arkham.
Total liquidations in the past 24 hours sit at $881 million, according to CoinGlass.
đ Banking excitement
Right before the weekend kicked off â and in the middle of the White House Crypto Summit â the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency clarified that, actually, banks could engage in some crypto activities.
Whatâs more, they donât necessarily need to seek the okay from regulators before hopping into crypto.
Itâs a big deal, but one that got lost in the sauce because we were a bit preoccupied with the executive order on the strategic bitcoin reserve and stockpile. Essentially, this was the first step that banks were waiting for.
From the OCCâs statement last week
Pillsbury partner Brian Montgomery told me his clients â which include banks, financial institutions and the like â are excited. He spoke to me from a banking conference where OCCâs acting Comptroller Rodney Hood appeared, and Hood sounded âvery eagerâ to open the avenue for banks.
Apparently, Bank of Americaâs Brian Moynihan isnât the only one considering a stablecoin either, as quite a few large national banks are mulling the idea, too.
âSome banks have wanted to be able to provide services in the digital asset space, and haven't been able to do it. So I don't know that the tone for banks has changed. I think the tone from regulators has been changing over the last several months,â Montgomery told me.
The thing is that the OCCâs statement only covers national banks. Weâd need to see something similar on the federal level from the FDIC and even the Federal Reserve to actually change the stance of regulators, but Montgomery thinks itâs just a matter of time before everyoneâs in alignment.
The timing could be a matter of months â specifically three to four months, though Montgomery was careful to note that the timeline is a bit speculative.
I should note there are reports floating around that suggest President Trump is mulling an executive order that would roll back some of the anti-crypto banking policies that the former administration put into place. Specifically, the EO would be expected to focus on the Federal Reserveâs policies and could be signed as soon as this week.
Either way, guidance could arrive in the next month or two. If this timeline works out, then it gives banks and regulators a cushion between letting financial institutions explore potential offerings and (hopefully) the passing of stablecoin regulation or other crypto regulation over in DC.
Itâs not just stablecoins the banks are interested in, either. Theyâre also looking to custody crypto and provide banking services to crypto firms (which is a shift in tone from Operation Chokepoint 2.0).
âWe've had to remind folks and think to ourselves that there are still state regulators out there that have a say in a lot of how this works, and so â whether itâs potential money transmission activity or state charter banks providing these services â it's a positive step that the federal administration and federal regulators are moving in this direction. But that's not always the end of the game. [We] need to be thinking about state regulation as well,â Montgomery explained.
Itâll be a âhurdleâ given that not all state regulators are crypto friendly, but itâs nothing Montgomery is concerned about â just something that heâll be mulling in further conversations
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ZKsync is accelerating institutional blockchain adoption and the rise of tokenization. Institutions choose ZKsync to move tokenized assets securely across enterprises while preserving privacy and governance. With gasless transactions, seamless onboarding, and scalable ZK infrastructure, enterprises can transfer financial products and data privately using ZK Stack â an open-source, trustless blockchain platform designed for speed, low costs, security, and interoperability without sacrificing control.
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Coinbaseâs back in business in India after registering with Indiaâs Financial Intelligence Unit, though it wonât actually roll out services until later this year.
CleanSpark is joining the S&P SmallCap 600 index later this month.
An Ethereum whale, whoâs held since its ICO, moved roughly 7,000 ETH to Kraken as the selloff deepened. Itâs just a small portion of the whaleâs total holdings, though, which sit at 30,000 ETH.
đ© No pain no gain
Itâs a blood bath no matter where you look.
And unfortunately, thereâs no denying equities and crypto are interconnected this time around.
ETHâs trading just a few hundred dollars above where it was around the time FTX collapsed in November 2022, while bitcoinâs maintained a sizable distance from that figure (a cool $65,000 above where it was at the time of the collapse, if you want a positive number).
A look at ETH
Justin Barlow, head of BD & Investments at Sei, told me itâs hard to pinpoint any bottom, not just the bottom, but right now, weâre very much tied into the macro narrative.
If sentiment were to flip, then he wouldnât be surprised if crypto changed its tune and we started to see more green pop up on various charts.
âIf you look at sort of historical correlations between the equities market and crypto, it's seemingly increased over time as crypto becomes more and more mainstream. And I think that's to be expected right now you have a lot of the big names that are active in traditional markets, very active in crypto markets, and naturally, when they want to be risk off, that translates into not just obviously equities, but also the crypto market as well,â Barlow explained.
Basically, when things are good, having BlackRock and other big financial giants in the space is great. But when things go sideways, well, cryptoâs one of the first trades that gets cycled out.
In the short term, this leaves crypto in a bad spot. Continue to expect a bit more pain until thereâs more favorable economic data, but it doesnât change the thinking that, long term, crypto is still looking strong.
(Please scroll up and reread the first section if you donât believe me.)
This is just one of the first cycles, Barlow said, where weâre seeing the mesh of traditional financial institutions and crypto play out.
âNot to say that there aren't opportunities for crypto to diverge from traditional markets, but it's certainly a factor, particularly for some of the larger assets,â he added.
The cycles are happening âmuch faster,â and he wouldnât be surprised if we start to see some excitement âbubble back upâ in the ânear future.â
âI think the important thing is just looking at things from the long term and thinking about it in terms of the sort of underlying metrics that matter and growth that matters of users, rather than just sort of intraday price fluctuations,â he told me.
This is just an unfortunate side effect of adoption, I guess.
Brought to you by:
ZKsync is accelerating institutional blockchain adoption and the rise of tokenization. Institutions choose ZKsync to move tokenized assets securely across enterprises while preserving privacy and governance. With gasless transactions, seamless onboarding, and scalable ZK infrastructure, enterprises can transfer financial products and data privately using ZK Stack â an open-source, trustless blockchain platform designed for speed, low costs, security, and interoperability without sacrificing control.
Learn more at ZKsync.io/empire.

On our minds: Crypto IPOs
Katherine: Itâs a topic Iâve been dying to get into after seeing reports that both Kraken and Gemini want to debut on the stock market.
I said this a while ago but I do think that this is the year of the crypto IPO. Or at least filing for one. We may need to see a bit more of a stable environment in equities before folks start heading to places like the New York Stock Exchange or Nasdaq to ring the opening bells.
These things also take a while. Weâre going to hear rumors and whispers about the roadshow â or not, depending on how the companies go public â and weâll get a sense of where these firms stand.
More importantly, weâll get a look at the financial makeup of the companies and that will give us a better understanding of how these firms are performing.
Thatâs also why I love traditional IPOs: Iâm nosy. I want to see what you have in your S-1 and dig through the filings for all the juicy details.