Fed's Governor Proposes Access to Central Bank’s Payment Infrastructure for Crypto Firms
The U.S. Federal Reserve may be inching toward its most significant shift on crypto access yet. Governor Christopher Waller, speaking at the Fed’s first-ever payments innovation conference, said the central bank must “embrace disruption” as it navigates the rise of digital assets and decentralized finance.
A New Model for Payment Access
Waller proposed creating a “skinny” or limited version of the Fed’s master account, which could give crypto and fintech firms direct, though restricted, access to the U.S. payment rails. These accounts would enable firms to move money without relying on traditional banks, a long-standing hurdle for the sector.
Source: Federal Reserve's YouTube Channel
The proposed accounts would differ from traditional master accounts in several key ways. They would not earn interest, allow daylight overdrafts, or grant borrowing rights through the Fed’s discount window. Instead, they would provide limited access with balance caps to minimize risk to the Fed’s balance sheet.
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Historically, access to master accounts — which enable direct settlement with the central bank — has been tightly guarded. Only federally chartered banks have qualified, with nonbanks facing intense scrutiny. Under the Fed’s current three-tiered system, the highest-risk entities, such as crypto platforms not subject to federal supervision, face the toughest review.
Ripple Effect Across Fintech and DeFi
Waller’s “payment account” proposal would represent a meaningful departure from this framework, opening a potential path for nonbanks and stablecoin issuers to interact more directly with the central bank’s infrastructure.
While the idea marks a major shift for the U.S., it is already common in other jurisdictions where nonbanks have partial access to central payment systems. Waller said this reality underscores why the Fed must evolve to remain competitive.
Waller’s comments drew attention from crypto and fintech leaders, including Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse, who has previously criticized Wall Street’s resistance to granting such access. Ripple is among the firms seeking a Fed master account, which would allow direct participation in the U.S. payments ecosystem.
For fintech companies and stablecoin issuers, a “payment account” could bridge the gap between innovation and regulation, granting limited but crucial entry into the U.S. financial core.