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The FDIC Has Had It With Crypto Companies Claiming It Insures Them (protocol.com) 37

After admonishing crypto lender Voyager Digital for "false and misleading" statements on the subject, the FDIC said banks must ensure that crypto firms they partner with are clear about whether customer deposits are insured. From a report: In industry guidance published Friday, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. said insured banks should monitor that crypto firms they work with do not misrepresent the availability of deposit insurance and "should take appropriate action to address such misrepresentations." The notice comes a day after the FDIC and Federal Reserve demanded Voyager Digital correct what it called misrepresentations that suggested some of its customers were covered by federal insurance if the firm collapsed.

When Voyager filed for bankruptcy earlier this month, its banking partner, Metropolitan Commercial Bank, issued a statement clarifying that FDIC insurance is available "only to protect against the failure of Metropolitan Commercial Bank," not Voyager. Metropolitan is holding about $350 million in customer funds, which Voyager has told customers will be released after the bank undergoes a fraud prevention process. Metropolitan is far from the only bank holding deposits on behalf of crypto companies, and now the FDIC wants to ensure customers are not further confused about how, or if, their assets are covered.

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The FDIC Has Had It With Crypto Companies Claiming It Insures Them

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  • best fix (Score:5, Informative)

    by jmccue ( 834797 ) on Friday July 29, 2022 @05:32PM (#62745660) Homepage

    The best fix for this is this rule:

    If the crypto company claims FDIC insurance, the Partnered Bank must cover the full "loss" per FDIC rules as specified for regular deposits.

    You can be this rule will stop this fraud quickly.

    • You want to punish the bank because a crypto exchange lied? What does the bank have to do with it?

      • And with it comes special responsibilities. One of those is making sure that the people they do business with are on the up and up. If they don't like it they can close their business running a bank and open up a burger shop or something.
        • You want banks to do background checks on all of their customers? You expect them to study every customer's web site to make sure they aren't lying about anything?

          You want banks to be both a regulator and law enforcement. Blame everybody but yourself for stupid decisions is what it sounds like.

          • You mean like the existing "know your customer" rules that are ALREADY in place? How about the suspicious activity reports that banks are ALREADY required to submit for things as innocuous as withdrawing your own funds in cash?

            If the banks do business with these charlatans, they bear some responsibility to verify who they are dealing with for sure.

            • KYC is a joke in crypto and you know it.

              Remember when crypto was supposed to protect you from the evil banks? WTF happened to that?

            • by Train0987 ( 1059246 ) on Friday July 29, 2022 @07:03PM (#62745872)

              Crypto Bro, 2012: "Crypto is totally immune from evil Governments and banks!"
              Crypto Bro, 2022: "I demand someone in the Government force a bank to give me back the money stolen from me by crypto!!!"

              • Crypto Bro, 2012: "Crypto is totally immune from evil Governments and banks!" Crypto Bro, 2022: "I demand someone in the Government force a bank to give me back the money stolen from me by crypto!!!"

                I would +1 that post if I had Mod points.

          • by PPH ( 736903 )

            You expect them to study every customer's web site to make sure they aren't lying about anything?

            First point: I assume you really meant 'partner'. The 'know your customer' rules don't really apply here.

            Study their web site? Web technology is such that what your compliance department sees isn't necessarily what the rubes^H^H^H^H^Hcustomers see. It's like a VW diesel emissions system on steroids.

            • Voyager was a customer of the bank. They weren't "partners" any more than "associates" at WalMart are. Unfortunately if I claim that you're my partner that doesn't obligate you to pay my debts.

        • The more restrictions and liability you place on the banks, the fewer banks will cater to these markets.

          The UK is finding this out at the moment.

          After the 2008 global financial crisis, the UK government fostered a sense of blame against the banks in the UK, despite only one failing and one being placed into the position of failing by the government itself - all the banks were tarred with the same brush (go ask anyone and they will say all the banks got free money - only two received financial aid, the rest

          • Having Banks cater the high risk markets when banks are an integral part of our society and economy isn't a good thing. Regulations exist for a reason but for some reason we all kind of forgot that in the last 40 years. Then every decade or so the entire world economy collapses and we all lose our jobs in a bunch of our property and for a brief period of time we remember why we put those rules in place. Then the economy recovers a little and we forget and we remove all those laws.

            During the last adminis
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Well, part of being a partner is that you're supposed to do due dilligence on those you partner with.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Powercntrl ( 458442 )

      The best fix for this is this rule:

      Firing squad.

      • Not firing squad, just criminal fraud with real jail time for the crypto directors/founders. A little jail time would go a long way in squashing this craziness.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Better fix, any crypto company claiming FDIC insurance gets shut down by the FDIC, with all funds being converted to USD and deposited with the bank the cyrpto firm used. The suckers, er I mean "customers" of the crypto company can then have accounts created at said bank to access their funds which are now backed by the fed instead of some imaginary bits floating around completely unregulated. It's really doing all those crypto suckers a favor anyway.

  • I misread the title to mean -- Crypto company claims that it insures the FDIC. Customer: "Are you FDIC insured?" Crypto Bank: "lol, WE are the FDIC's insurance in case THEY go bankrupt."

  • Does the FDIC have authority to file lawsuits?

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