Share this article
OCC Halts Fair Access Banking Rule
The rule would have prohibited U.S. banks from denying services based on ideological factors.
By Danny Nelson
Updated Sep 14, 2021, 11:02 a.m. Published Jan 28, 2021, 5:50 p.m. 1 min read

The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency on Thursday put former acting Comptroller Brian Brooks' controversial "fair access" banking rule on hold pending a review by the new administration.
- Brooks' so-called "fair access" rule sought to prohibit federally chartered banks from denying financial services such as lending to would-be clients on political or ideological grounds.
- While the rule never mentioned cryptocurrencies, it came as welcome news to businesses in the space, which have long struggled to obtain or keep bank accounts in the U.S.
- The OCC rushed to finalize the rule before the end of President Donald Trump's term, but it was never published in the Federal Register.
- Proponents have claimed the rule was a necessary check on politically motivated financial exclusion. Detractors have blasted the proposal for being far from fair.
- The next OCC head will review the rule once he or she is confirmed, OCC said in a statement.
OPINION: We Don’t Need the OCC’s ‘Political Discrimination’ Rule
More For You

From May 20 to May 29, XRP funds took in $35 million while bitcoin and ether ETFs lost roughly $2 billion combined, with Ripple’s earlier reported XRP treasury plan still awaiting confirmation.
What to know:
- U.S.-listed spot XRP ETFs drew $11.88 million in net inflows on May 29, extending a week of gains even as bitcoin and ether funds saw continued redemptions.
- Total net assets in U.S. XRP ETFs now stand near $1.12 billion, with about $35 million added since May 20 while bitcoin and...











