Power & Market

Kraken Financial: More Bank than Bank

Fork in the road on left is full reserve on right is credit destruction

You know we’re living in topsy-turvy times when the central bank does everything in its power to stop full-service banking in favor of fractional-reserve banking. The reason: success in the former exposes the structural flaws in the latter. Should the public catch on, the system could buckle simply by too many people asking for their money back.

Last week, the Fed put out a seemingly innocuous press release asking for public input:

… to establish a “payment account,” which legally eligible financial institutions could use for the specific purpose of clearing and settling their payments. 

They are speaking about Tier 3 non-federally insured depository institutions overseen at the state level, such as fintech startups and digital asset banks. But what they’re really responding to is a breakthrough event that occurred on March 4, 2026:

We are excited to announce that Kraken Financial, our Wyoming-chartered bank, has been granted a Federal Reserve master account. The approval makes Kraken Financial the first digital asset bank in U.S. history to gain direct access to the Federal Reserve’s payment infrastructure. 

After more than five years of regulatory hurdles, Kraken Financial made it to the finish line, bypassing a federal charter entirely via Wyoming’s Special Purpose Depository Institution (SPDI) legislation. It earned a Tier 3 classification, becoming the first and currently only crypto bank of its kind to hold a Master Account at the Fed.

The “threat” is that per Wyoming statutory regulations, Kraken functions:

… on a full-reserve basis, holding liquid assets equal to or exceeding 100% of client fiat deposits. 

Operating under a strict warehouse responsibility, Kraken is prohibited from fractional-reserve lending or creating credit at the stroke of a keyboard. The clients’ assets are always there and fully backed.

The Fed’s reaction is telling. In the proposal, they declare that these specialized Payment Account holders:

… would not have access to intraday credit or the discount window, would not earn interest on balances held at a Reserve Bank, and would only have access to payment services with automated controls to prevent overdrafts.

In other words, these Tier 3 institutions must absorb 100% of the operational risk. They are barred from earning the Interest on Reserve Balances (IORB) enjoyed by legacy Tier 1 banks, and are denied access to additional credit support systems. Ironically, the newest financial institutions are being forced to operate in the traditional, honest warehouse manner that mainstream commercial banks abandoned decades ago.

Even more telling, to ensure no other Tier 3 banks slip through the cracks, the Fed is:

… encouraging Reserve Banks to temporarily pause decisions on access requests from institutions that fall within Tier 3... until the Board has completed its policy development process…

According to Footnote 27 of the 96-page proposal, this mandatory pause freezes all pending Tier 3 applicants until at least December 31, 2026. Given that a final decision will be made at the end of the year, we cannot put it past the Fed to find a reason to revoke Tier 3 access to the payment system entirely; we will have to stay tuned.

Whether one is a fan of alternative banking models or digital assets is beside the point. Full-reserve warehouses pose a direct threat to the Federal Reserve system. They are freezing Tier 3 because it could lead to central bank obsolescence. If these safe warehouses prove profitable, and even worse, proliferate across the countryside, a snowball effect will drain the fractional-reserve system, ushering in a return to sound and honest banking.

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