Thursday, December 26, 2024

'Debanking' In The USA (crypto and other businesses)

From crypto/trad-banking maven Nic Carter on X:

everyone is familiar with 'debanking' but many are curious as to the precise mechanism through which bank regulation causes debanking. it's obscure and complex which is why we don't have a ton of "evidence". this is be design. I will explain here the specific regulatory developments that led us to this current moment.

1) incorporation of reputational risk into supervisory bank ratings

if you follow bank regulation, you are probably familiar with CAMELS. that's the rubric bank regulators like the FDIC use to evaluate banks. it refers to Capital Adequacy, Asset Quality, Management Quality, Earnings, Liquidity, and Sensitivity to market risk.

however, in 2009, a new letter, R, was added. call it, CRAMELS. the R stands for Reputational risk. Reputational risk is particularly insidious because it can refer to anything. regulators can assign the reputational risk tag to any aspect of a bank's operations. if a regulator doesn't like something a bank is doing, they can call it risky. and of course, facing an enforcement action or consent order adds actual risk to the bank, as clients might desert it. so the regulators can actually create risk by calling a bank's activities risky. this is a literal catch-22!

in 2011, the FDIC put out a circular listing 30 different industries as "high risk". this wasn't explicit regulation or law, just a list of industries they felt were risky for banks to serve. this was the foundation for what became known as Operation Choke Point.

around 2013, the DoJ found a new creative strategy to crack down on non-illegal but distasteful industries, starting with payday lending, then moving on to gun shops, coin dealers, and many others. the way this was actually imposed was through bank regulators like the FDIC calling banks and telling them that certain industries, you guessed it, posed a reputational risk to the banks supporting them. this was totally arbitrary. but it worked. the banks didn't want to fall afoul of the FDIC, so they largely dropped support for the industries deemed "risky".

there's a good paper on why reputational risk is a bad addition to CAMELS courtesy of @ProfJulieHill
: https://scholarship.law.ua.edu/fac_articles/152/

this is why the FDIC's bank oversight model is so insidious – it's indirect. bank regulators don't go to banks and say "debank this specific client". instead, they say "industry x is high risk". high risk means you have to incur much higher compliance costs to support firms in that industry. for many banks, the high risk tag means that it's often simply not economical to support that industry. (and this is also why the biggest firms are still able to be banked. they can stomach the higher costs and compliance demands of banks. debanking mostly hurts the little guy - early stage startups).

2) elimination / effective prohibition of specialist banks

in response to the reputational risk framework, some banks developed a boutique practice devoted to serving "high risk" industries. in the crypto space, infamously, Signature and Silvergate built their practices around serving crypto firms. in my opinion, both banks were taken out by regulators in spring 2023. Signature was being sent into receivership while solvent (and stripped of their crypto practice during the sale). Silvergate was stripped of their entire business, via the imposition of the 15% effective threshold on crypto deposits, making it impossible for them to continue.

other banks cropped up to serve crypto, like Customers and Cross River, but they ended up facing consent orders from regulators. the message was clear: serve crypto, and be executed, or subject to lawfare.

some new banks, like Caitlin Long's Custodia, also emerged to try and serve crypto directly. Custodia was denied access to a Federal Reserve master account and left largely unable to operate.

it makes sense, given the risk framework, that specialists would emerge. an ordinary bank with a small crypto practice (or any other "risky" sector) may not deem it worth it to incur the high fixed compliance costs and likely would choose to offboard those clients. it might be an unnecessary headache to risk regulator scrutiny if crypto is only 5% of your business. so naturally, some banks would come along that would craft their businesses around this "risky" sector and make it clear up front what they were doing. and build a compliance function entirely around supporting that industry. but post march 2023, this became a prohibited activity, as banks were told to keep their crypto practice to only "ancillary" levels (i.e. around 15% of their total deposits). so no specialists could exist.

Since Dodd Frank, new bank charters are vanishingly rare and hard to get. thus, the market cannot clear: there's clearly an opportunity to serve an industry that other banks won't touch, but new banks are effectively prohibited from entering the business.

3) incorporation of "stakeholder capitalism" into bank supervision

following the GFC, bank regulators started to think more about "stakeholder capitalism" in bank regulation. banks aren't just banks, they're instruments of economic policy, and that should stretch to encompass virtually everyone.

in 2023, the FDIC decided to expand the set of entities that banks have to consider in their actions beyond just clients and shareholders, to ... potentially everyone. anyone is potentially a "stakeholder" in a bank's activities, even if they aren't a bank client or shareholder.

the proposed guidelines asked banks to consider "the interests of all its stakeholders, including shareholders, depositors, creditors, customers, regulators, and the public." as the WSJ said, "progressives apparently believe bank directors have a fiduciary duty to government regulators." banks have to care about the effect of their actions on anyone and everyone. this is a massive expansion of the FDIC's mandate.

ironically, if the FDIC itself were subject to this framework, Chair Gruenberg would have resigned long ago, because he presided over a long scandal pertaining to pervasive misconduct at the agency (see: https://archive.li/Ufy1q)

4) veil of secrecy via Confidential Supervisory Information

conversations between bank regulators and banks are considered "confidential supervisory information" or CSI. this is actually meant to protect the banks. if a bank is having a private conversation with a regulator over some issue they're encountering, it makes sense to give them some privacy until they can figure it out. however, perversely, CSI has now been weaponized to protect regulators. banks are prohibited from publicly sharing the kind of guidance they are getting from bank supervisors. this is why you didn't hear much about the FDIC's pressure campaign against crypto (aside from a few pieces from myself and others sourced from bank execs). CSI is the legal mechanism keeping a lid on this whole scandal. many of the most affected bankers were also embroiled in enforcement actions, which in my view, was also an attempt to cover up the summary executions of Silvergate and Signature. naturally, executives couldn't say much while they were still litigating or negotiating settlements....

....MUCH MORE

Nic Carter home (blog posts and op-eds):

My latest

Bitcoin Magazine, I don’t support a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve, and neither should you (Dec. 2024)
I make the case against the US Government acquiring additional Bitcoins

Fortune, Debanking hurts everyone. It’s time to end it once and for all, with Austin Campbell (Dec. 2024)
My op-ed in Fortune giving a general overview of the debanking of crypto firms

Medium, Marc Andreessen and the CFPB: Debunking the Debanking Debunkers (Nov. 2024)
A discussion of Marc Andreessen’s comments on crypto debanking and the role of the CFPB

Coindesk, Why You Should (Still) Care About Silvergate (Oct. 2024)
My retrospective on the Silvergate affair and how events have become much clearer with the passage of time


Operation Chokepoint 2.0

My four-part series in Piratewires on the Biden administration’s crackdown on crypto firms via cover bank regulation

Part I: Operation Choke Point 2.0 Is Underway, And Crypto Is In Its Crosshairs (March 2023)
I notice the origins of a coordinate crackdown on crypto banking in the wake of the FTX crisis

Part II: Did The Government Start A Global Financial Crisis In An Attempt To Destroy Crypto? (May 2023)
Amidst the banking crisis of 2023, pro-crypto banks Silvergate and Signature are suspiciously shut down

Part III: Inside the Biden Admin’s Plot to Destroy Silvergate and Debank Crypto for Good (Sep. 2024)
More revelations from the Silvergate bankruptcy filings and subsequent action by regulators confirms my suspicions

Part IV: Marc Andreessen and the CFPB: Debunking the Debanking Debunkers (Dec. 2024)
I assess Marc Andreessen’s explosive new claims about debanking

Part V: Operation Choke Point 2.0 Goes Mainstream (Dec. 2024)
Piratewires’ Brandon Gorrell summarizes my reporting on OCP2.0 and covers the mainstreaming of the thesis

Overview: Debanking hurts everyone. It’s time to end it once and for all, with Austin Campbell (Dec. 2024)
My op-ed in Fortune giving a general overview of the debanking of crypto firms in Fortune