The OCC worries unregulated fintech firms could lead to a financial crisis – Insider Intelligence

Nothing new: Regulators have previously flagged these issues—saying that loosely regulated fintechs continue to push further into the banking space.

Some fintech firms even portray themselves as banks, when in reality they’ve partnered with a bank that handles all banking-related services.

  • Misrepresentation is common in the crypto space. For example, crypto broker Voyager Digital misleadingly implied customers’ crypto deposits were FDIC-insured. But it’s also been on the rise through the proliferation of neobanks and super apps.
  • Consumers are not always aware of which entity is managing and benefiting from their money, and fintechs aren’t always making their disclosures clear.

Baby steps: Last week, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) took a small step in “regulation through enforcement” by requiring Virginia-based Blue Ridge Bank to better monitor the risks posed by its fintech partners. The bank also must gain approval from the agency before partnering with any new fintechs or offering new products from existing fintech partners. But talk about formal regulation of fintechs has been just that—talk.

  • The OCC reorganized earlier this year to enhance scrutiny of small and midsize banks that follow nontraditional business plans or are partnering with fintechs, but it still will only be overseeing technological changes.
  • The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) also said it plans to exercise greater oversight of fintechs, but that’s not happening yet.
  • This week, multiple regulatory agencies made contradictory statements regarding crypto regulation. Federal Bank Chief Michael Barr vowed to make crypto a top priority of the Fed, but Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Gary Gensler and the OCC’s Hsu both said there is no rush to regulate the digital currencies.

The big takeaway: Hsu’s observations about banks partnering with fintechs aren’t wrong. Many banks, especially smaller banks, find it more cost-effective and quicker to partner with a fintech company than to develop digital capabilities in-house.

But it’s confusing and paradoxical that the same agency that patted itself on the back for delaying crypto regulation is now warning of a financial crisis due to a lack of regulation. It’s not unreasonable to hypothesize that lack of regulation was a contributing factor in the recent crypto crisis. And while the OCC boasts about the crypto fallout’s containment away from traditional asset markets, its lack of momentum on fintech firms could help cause a fintech catastrophe.

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