U.S. bank regulator allows fintech firms to seek federal charter

Reuters  |  WASHINGTON 

By and Pete Schroeder

The move by the of the opens the door for online and lenders to operate nationwide under a single licensing and regulatory regime instead of a patchwork of state licenses, and came hours after the Treasury Department endorsed the approach.

Effective immediately, the OCC will accept applications from non-depository fintech companies for a special

The regulator said successful applicants would be supervised similarly to comparable banks, and companies must provide a contingency plan for how they would navigate financial stress that could threaten their operations.

The decision will come as a relief to some online lenders, who have complained that applying for licenses on a state-by-state basis is onerous.

"If they can create a national standard of sorts and harmonize that regulatory burden then that will provide a real benefit to America's small businesses and hopefully in the long run decrease of the cost of credit," said Scott Stewart, chief of group which represents like and Kabbage, among others.

A fintech charter was first floated by the OCC in 2016. State regulators have vigorously opposed the idea, saying it exceeds the statutory authority.

The Department of Financial Services and the Conference of Supervisors unsuccessfully sued the OCC last year to block the charter.

In a statement on Tuesday, the regulator said the decision will "impose an entirely unjustified federal regulatory scheme on an already fully functional and deeply rooted state regulatory landscape."

The Independent Community Bankers of has also raised concerns, saying such a charter may allow fintech firms to circumvent

In a report on fintech and lending released earlier on Tuesday, the Treasury recommended the charter as a way to improve the U.S. regulatory landscape to support and

But the Treasury recommended against allowing fintech firms to collect government-insured deposits under such a charter.

The OCC will only accept applications from non-depository firms. This limitation, which aims to reduce risks to taxpayers, could undermine the use of a charter for some fintech firms, according to industry insiders.

Tuesday's report was the last of four by the Treasury as part of a review of financial rules mandated by an order from U.S. in February. The previous three reports focused on banks, capital markets and asset managers and insurers.

(Reporting by and Pete Schroeder; Editing by Meredith Mazzilli)

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First Published: Wed, August 01 2018. 01:07 IST