
Circle applies for national trust bank status
2
The company has formally submitted an application to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) to establish the new trust institution, which will operate under the name First National Digital Currency Bank, N.A.
If the charter is approved, it would enable Circle to act as a custodian for its own reserves and hold crypto assets, such as tokenized stocks and bonds, on behalf of institutional clients. Currently, Circle's reserves are held in custody at BNY and managed by BlackRock.
Circle co-founder, chairman and CEO Jeremy Allaire, states: 'By applying for a national trust charter, Circle is taking proactive steps to further strengthen our USDC infrastructure. Further, we will align with emerging US regulation for the issuance and operation of dollar-denominated payment stablecoins, which we believe can enhance the reach and resilience of the US dollar, and support the development of crucial, market neutral infrastructure for the world's leading institutions to build on.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
26 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Handsome supermarket heir, 62, dies of 'natural causes' at stunning $1.3m mansion
A handsome local supermarket heir has died at just 62 years old from 'natural causes,' the grocery chain announced. Rick Wright, the CEO of Market of Choice, died in his mansion on Sunday in Eugene, Oregon, which is about two hours south of Portland. The company didn't elaborate on Wright's cause of death. A spokesperson for Market of Choice said that they didn't have any further details to share at this time. Wright spent his entire professional life in the grocery store industry, learning the ropes from his father and working at the store as a young adult. His father, Richard Wright Sr., launched the business in 1979, and Wright took the reins in 1997. The family operated four stores in the area, which later became Price Chopper locations before Wright took over the business. When the late CEO stepped into the position, he rebranded the chain to focus on locally grown food, instead of wholesale products. 'Wright is remembered for his visionary leadership of Market of Choice and his philanthropic efforts in Lane County, across Oregon and beyond,' the company said. In January, Wright spoke with Oregon Business about the growth of his company, telling the publication, 'There just aren't a lot of companies like Market of Choice that's willing to invest the money that it takes to keep it local and build local.' Under Wright's direction, the chain carried over 7,000 locally sourced products and employed almost 1,400 workers. The chain also implemented the MOJO Program, which gave new businesses a one-year guarantee on their shelves. Market of Choice prioritized local businesses for distribution,and supplied nearly 800 products from Oregon's small business community. He told Everyday Northwest in 2022 that the chain intended to stay in Oregon and prided itself on being family-owned. The company praised Wright as 'one of the most recognized faces in Oregon's grocery industry.' 'He helped redefine what a grocery store can be — not just a place to buy food, but a force for sustaining local economies, fostering innovation and nourishing the spirit of Oregon,' the company continued. 'At his core, Wright was a steward of good food, of local communities, and of people.' Wright and his wife, Debbie, had three children together, Zach, Staci, and Sydney. The CEO is also survived by his two grandchildren, three siblings, and his mother, Marsha.


The Guardian
27 minutes ago
- The Guardian
The Guardian view on Trump's aid cuts and development: the global majority deserve justice, not charity
When one door closes, you would hope that another opens. As USAID was formally shut down on Monday, a once-in-a-decade development financing conference was kicking off in Seville. But while initially intended to move the world closer to its ambitious 2030 sustainable development goals, it now looks more like an attempt to prevent a reversal of the progress already made. A study published in the Lancet predicted that Donald Trump's aid cuts could claim more than 14 million lives by 2030, a third of them among children. For many poor countries, the scale of the shock would be similar to that of a major war, the authors found. More than four-fifths of the US agency's programmes have been cut, with surviving projects folded into the state department. The US was by far the world's largest donor to global development – though its contributions were a fraction of the G7 target of 0.7% of GDP. Yet the damage does not end there. Its move encouraged others to follow suit. The UK, Germany and France are slashing their aid budgets to spend more on defence. Oxfam says that the collective retrenchment by G7 nations is the biggest aid cut since 1960, with spending 26% lower in 2026 than it was last year. Don't expect China or the Gulf states to fill this gaping hole. It is not just grim news for aid recipients. It bodes ill for all. It would be naive to imagine that aid is a high‑mindedly altruistic endeavour. Just as conflict breeds hunger and poverty, so injustice and deprivation breed instability and a more dangerous world. Slashing health budgets also increases the risks of another global pandemic. Developing countries hoped that the UN- and Spanish-hosted International Conference on Financing for Development would at least see a willingness to tackle an international financial system stacked against the global majority. Instead, the US, UK, EU and others shamefully acted as blockers, watering down the language on a UN intergovernmental process to tackle the debt crisis. The US reportedly proposed 400 amendments across a multitude of issues to the conference's outcome document before pulling out entirely. Others will need to be held to their too-limited commitments. More than two-fifths of the global population live in low income countries which are in debt distress or close to it. Many poor African nations are spending more on debt financing than they do on health or education. Contrary to popular perception – and any sense of justice and decency – wealth is flowing from them to developed nations. The UN says that servicing debt cost developing countries $847bn last year, rising to $947bn this year. Yet developed countries are choosing to shore up an unfair global financial system. The keenness of the UK and others to focus on private sector‑oriented solutions looks like better news for the City than developing nations. The promise that private finance would turn 'billions to trillions' was enthusiastically promoted a decade ago, yet largely failed to materialise. Despite the enduring inequality, the last few decades saw extraordinary progress in areas such as cutting child mortality. For all their flaws, USAID-funded programmes alone saved almost 92 million lives over 20 years. We know that remarkable leaps in human wellbeing are possible. We will all regret it if, in this time of conflict and crisis, we slam the door shut on such advances and block out the call of justice.


The Guardian
35 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Senate Republicans pass Trump's 'big, beautiful' tax bill
Senate Republicans on Tuesday passed a major tax and spending bill after weeks of negotiations, bringing Donald Trump's megabill one step closer to enactment. The US president, who was in Florida holding a press conference on a highly controversial new migrant detention facility, said the news of the vote was 'music to my ears'. The Senate minority leader, Chuck Schumer, called the bill a 'a big, ugly betrayal'