STABLECOINS · BANKING / TRUST · SETTLEMENT PERIMETER
OCC Case | Custody, Reserves, and Settlement
Research note • A regulator-centric map of the OCC’s stablecoin-relevant activity framework • Styled for CryptoWisely
OCC
Banking / Trust
Custody
Stablecoin Reserves
Settlement
Payments-grade
Operational Controls
Executive snapshot
| What this page is | A practical map of how the OCC’s banking and trust lens intersects with stablecoin infrastructure. The OCC is not “approving stablecoins as products.” It is framing what regulated institutions can do safely: custody, reserve holding, and settlement participation. |
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| Why it matters | These letters define a real-world perimeter for payments-grade stablecoins: once banks or trust structures are involved, the operating model shifts toward controls, auditability, safeguarding, and redemption readiness. |
| What you should take away | For institutional adoption, the stablecoin “story” is secondary. The product is the operating stack: custody controls, reserve posture, and settlement execution under oversight. |
The perimeter: what the OCC is really regulating
| Primary focus | The OCC supervises national banks and trust-related activities. Stablecoin relevance appears through bank activities and risk management, not token classification. |
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| What becomes “bank-like” | Safeguarding, segregation, governance, operational resilience, third-party risk, reconciliation, and reporting. |
| Institutional implication | A stablecoin can be “crypto-native,” but institutional settlement demands a regulated control layer. This is where trust/bank structures become strategic. |
Table-first map: the three interpretive letters
| IL 1170 (2020) — Custody | Establishes that national banks may provide crypto custody services as part of modern safekeeping. This anchors institutional key/asset safeguarding into a supervised banking function. |
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| IL 1172 (2020) — Stablecoin reserves | Supports the view that national banks can hold reserve deposits for certain stablecoin issuers. This pulls the stablecoin “trust stack” toward reserve governance + redemption operations. |
| IL 1174 (2021) — Nodes + settlement | Connects bank activity with participation in independent node verification networks and stablecoin settlement. The signal: banks can treat some onchain networks as settlement infrastructure, subject to controls. |
Operating model (how this shows up in production)
| Issuer layer | Program design, mint/burn logic, distribution partners, and market access rules. |
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| Regulated control layer | Bank/trust roles such as custody, reserve placement, settlement execution, and the control environment that makes these activities institutionally usable. |
| Practical implication | If you want institutional volume, design the stablecoin around the control layer: who holds reserves, how redemption works operationally, who performs custody, and how settlement is reconciled. |
CryptoWisely.io Comment
OCC is a useful regulator case because it reframes the stablecoin question:
not “which token,” but which regulated activities make stablecoin settlement viable at scale.
CryptoWisely Insight: treat custody controls + reserve posture + redemption ops + settlement reconciliation as first-class product requirements. Marketing follows the operating model, not the other way around.
CryptoWisely Insight: treat custody controls + reserve posture + redemption ops + settlement reconciliation as first-class product requirements. Marketing follows the operating model, not the other way around.
Related reading (issuer case study)
| Ripple | RLUSD (NYDFS trust perimeter) |
Ripple | RLUSD — compliance-first USD stablecoin issued by a NYDFS-regulated trust
Issuer operating model + controls + reserves/attestations (separate page).
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Sources (library)
| OCC Interpretive Letter 1174 (2021) | OCC-Interpretive-Letter-1174-2021.pdf |
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| OCC Interpretive Letter 1172 (2020) | OCC-Interpretive-Letter-1172-2020.pdf |
| OCC Interpretive Letter 1170 (2020) | OCC-Interpretive-Letter-1170-2020.pdf |
Disclaimer: This note is for planning purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or investment advice. Always validate current program details and applicable requirements before execution.