
Exclusive-Paxos joins spate of crypto companies applying for US trust bank licenses
(Reuters) -Paxos Trust Company, the cryptocurrency firm behind PayPal's stablecoin, said it is applying to create a national trust bank in the U.S., joining a raft of digital asset companies looking to gain a larger foothold in the traditional financial system.
If the charter is granted by the U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, it would allow Paxos to manage and hold assets on behalf of customers and settle payments faster. Unlike traditional banks, the license would not allow Paxos to take cash deposits or make loans.
If approved, Paxos would convert its limited purpose trust charter with the New York Department of Financial Services to a federal charter under the OCC.
The charter wouldn't change Paxos' business model, but would offer the "highest level of regulatory oversight... that carries more weight in the U.S. and globally," according to a source familiar with the matter.
Paxos previously applied for a national trust bank charter in 2020, and the firm received preliminary conditional approval from the OCC in 2021. But its application stalled and eventually expired in 2023.
Crypto platform Anchorage Digital is currently the only digital asset company with a national trust bank charter.
Stablecoin firm Circle along with crypto firm Ripple also applied for national trust bank charters last month.
Paxos offers businesses blockchain and stablecoin infrastructure and capabilities, and issues several of its own stablecoins. Paxos issues PayPal's stablecoin PYUSD, which has a market capitalization of more than $1 billion.
Stablecoins, a type of cryptocurrency designed to maintain a constant value, usually a 1:1 dollar peg, are commonly used by crypto traders to move funds between tokens. Their use has grown rapidly in recent years, and proponents say they could be used to send payments instantly.
Last month, U.S. President Donald Trump signed a law to create a regulatory regime for stablecoins, a milestone that experts said could pave the way for the digital assets to become an everyday way to make payments and move money.
The law's passage was the culmination ofa long lobbying effort by the crypto industry, which donated more than $245 million in last year's elections to aid pro-crypto candidates including Trump, according to Federal Election Commission data.
Paxos had previously partnered with Binance, the world's largest cryptocurrency exchange, to market and distribute the Binance USD stablecoin.
New York ordered Paxos in early 2023 to stop issuing Binance's stablecoin, and Paxos subsequently ended the partnership.
Last week, Paxos reached a $48.5 million settlement to resolve New York charges that the company failed to police illegal activity related to Binance, after Binance's former chief executive pleaded guilty to breaking U.S. anti-money laundering laws as part of a $4.3 billion settlement in 2023.
(Reporting by Hannah Lang in New York; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama )

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


The Star
4 hours ago
- The Star
Household spending, services forecast to bolster economy
PETALING JAYA: Malaysia's economic momentum is expected to hold firm into the second half of this year (2H25), buoyed by resilient domestic demand, targeted policy support, and a recovering tourism sector, even as external headwinds from global trade tensions continue to loom. Analysts said distributive trade and services activity should remain steady, underpinned by higher household spending capacity from recent monetary easing and fiscal measures. CIMB Research noted that quarterly growth in distributive trade volume was steady, with growth of 4.3% year-on-year (y-o-y) in the second quarter of this year (2Q25) compared with 4.3% in 1Q25, while overall services volume growth eased to 5% y-o-y versus 5.2% in 1Q25), weighed down by slower expansion in the finance and insurance, transport, and real estate subsectors. The research house estimates final 2Q25 gross domestic product (GDP) growth at 4.4%, just shy of the advance estimate of 4.5% and matching 1Q25's pace. 'We maintain our 4.3% GDP growth forecast for this year, supported by the reduced 19% US tariff on Malaysia and recent domestic policy measures,' the research house said, adding that downside risks persist from Washington's focus on semiconductor tariffs, which could weigh heavily on Malaysia's electrical and electronics (E&E) sector. The Statistics Department reported last week that the distributive trade index rose 4.3% y-o-y in June to 162.4 points, unchanged from May's pace. In value terms, sales accelerated to 4.8% y-o-y to RM153bil, underscoring sustained consumer spending despite a volatile global backdrop. Kenanga Research said that distributive trade growth averaged 4.9% in 1H25, with wholesale trade up 5.3% and retail trade climbing 5.9%. It expects momentum to gradually pick up in 2H25, aided by 'rising tourist arrivals, continued domestic demand, and higher government spending in line with seasonal trends'. The research house added that 'domestic risks appear limited' following the government's move to lower RON95 fuel prices to RM1.99 per litre for 18 million people alongside higher cash handouts, which it said will help ease cost-of-living pressures. While the research house has maintained a forecast of 4.3% GDP growth for the year, it cautioned that US President Donald Trump's latest threat of a 100% tariff on selected chip imports could add new uncertainty to global trade and exports prospects, particularly for Malaysia's E&E sector. Meanwhile, TA Research anticipates 2Q25 services GDP growth will come in slightly below the Statistics Department's advanced estimate of 5.3% y-o-y, likely at around 5% y-o-y, but said overall GDP should be in line with the earlier projection. The research house pointed to stronger-than-expected performances in mining and agriculture, alongside resilient household spending, as key supports. 'All in all, we expect both household spending and services activity to remain on a firm footing in 2H25, underpinned by resilient domestic demand, a robust labour market, lower fuel prices, higher cash transfers, subdued inflation, and the July overnight policy rate cut,' it said. Meanwhile, BIMB Research kept its distributive trade growth forecast for this year at 5.2%, with retail trade projected to climb 6.6% on the back of 'resilient consumer sentiment and the continued recovery in domestic demand'.


The Star
4 hours ago
- The Star
Trump's India threats are hollow for crude market
THE crude oil market's rather sanguine reaction to the US threats to India over its continued purchases of Russian oil is effectively a bet that very little will actually happen. President Donald Trump cited India's imports of Russian crude when imposing an additional 25% tariff on imports from India on Aug 6, which is due to take effect on Aug 28. If the new tariff rate does come into place, it will take the rate for some Indian goods to as much as 50%, a level high enough to effectively end US imports from India, which totalled nearly US$87bil in 2024. As with everything related to Trump, it pays to be cautious given his track record of backflips and pivots. It's also not exactly clear what Trump is ultimately seeking, although it does seem that in the short term he wants to increase his leverage with Russian President Vladimir Putin ahead of their planned meeting in Alaska this week, and he's using India to achieve this. Whether Trump follows through on his additional tariffs on India remains uncertain, although the chances of a peace deal in Ukraine seem remote, which means the best path for India to avoid the tariffs would be to acquiesce and stop buying Russian oil. But this is an outcome that simply isn't being reflected in current crude oil prices. Global benchmark Brent futures have weakened since Trump's announcement of higher tariffs on India, dropping as low as US$65.81 a barrel in early Asian trade yesterday, the lowest level in two months. This is a price that entirely discounts any threat to global supplies, and assumes that India will either continue buying Russian crude at current volumes, or be able to easily source suitable replacements without tightening the global market. Are these reasonable assumptions? The track record of the crude oil market is somewhat remarkable in that it quickly adapts to new geopolitical realities and any price spikes tend to be shortlived. The Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 sent crude prices hurtling toward US$150 a barrel as European and other Western countries pulled back from buying Russian crude. But within four months the price was back below where it was before Moscow's attack on its neighbour as the market simply re-routed the now discounted Russian oil to China and India. In other words, the flow of oil around the globe was shifted, but the volumes available for importers remained much the same. Different this time? But what Trump is proposing now is somewhat different. It appears he wants to cut Russian barrels out of the market in order to put financial pressure on Moscow to cut a deal over Ukraine. There are effectively only two major buyers for Russian crude, India and China. China, the world's biggest crude importer, has more leverage with Trump given US and Western reliance on its refined critical and other minerals, and therefore is less able to be coerced into ending its imports of Russian oil. India is in a less strong position, especially private refiners like Reliance Industries, which will want to keep business relationships and access to Western economies. India imported about 1.8 million barrels per day of Russian crude in the first half of the year, or about 37% of its total, according to data compiled by commodity analysts Kpler. About 90% of its Russian imports came from Russia's European ports and was mainly Urals grade. This is a medium sour crude and it would raise challenges for Indian refiners if they sought to replace all their Urals imports with similar grades from other suppliers. There are some Middle Eastern grades of similar quality, such as Saudi Arabia's Arab Light and Iraq's Basrah Light, but it would likely boost prices if India were to seek more of these crudes. If Chinese refiners were able to take the bulk of Russian crude given up by India, it may allow for a reshuffling of flows, but that would not appear to be what Trump wants. Trump and his advisers may believe there is enough spare crude production capacity in the United States and elsewhere to handle the loss of up to two million bpd of Russian supplies. But testing that theory may well lead to higher prices, especially for certain types of medium crudes which would be in short supply. It's simplistic to say that higher US output can supply India's refiners, as this would mean those refiners would have to be willing to accept a different mix of refined products, including producing less diesel, as US light crudes tend to make more products such as petrol. For now the crude oil market is assuming that the Trump/India/Russia situation will end as another Taco, the acronym for Trump always chickens out. But the reality is likely to be slightly more messy, as some Indian refiners pull back from importing from Russia, some Chinese refiners may buy more and once again the oil market goes on a geopolitical merry-go-round. — Reuters Clyde Russell is an Asia commodities and energy columnist at Reuters. The views expressed here are the writer's own.


The Star
4 hours ago
- The Star
Nvidia, AMD to pay US 15% of China AI chip sales
(FILES) People attend a Nvidia production preview exhibition in Taipei on May 21, 2025. Chinese authorities summoned US technology giant Nvidia on July 31, 2025 to discuss "serious security issues" discovered involving its chips, the country's top internet regulator said. (Photo by I-HWA CHENG / AFP) New York: Nvidia Corp and Advanced Micro Devices Inc (AMD) have agreed to pay 15% of their revenues from Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) chip sales to the US government in a deal to secure export licences, an unusual arrangement that may unnerve both US companies and Beijing. Nvidia plans to share 15% of the revenue from sales of its H20 AI accelerator in China, according to a person familiar with the matter. AMD will deliver the same share from MI308 revenues, the person added, asking for anonymity to discuss internal deliberations. The arrangement reflects US President Donald Trump's consistent effort to engineer a financial payout for America in return for concessions on trade. His administration has shown a willingness to relax trade conditions like tariffs in return for giant investments in the United States – as with Apple Inc's pledge to spend US$600bil on domestic manufacturing. But such a narrow, select export tax has little precedent in modern corporate history. Beijing, which has grown increasingly hostile to the idea of Chinese firms deploying the H20, is unlikely to warm to the idea of a chip tax. Yuyuantantian, a social media account affiliated with state-run China Central Television that regularly signals Beijing's thinking about trade, on Sunday slammed the chip's supposed security vulnerabilities and inefficiency. 'This seeming quid pro quo is unprecedented from an export control perspective. The arrangement risks invalidating the national security rationale for US export controls,' said Jacob Feldgoise, a researcher at the Washington-based Centre for Security and Emerging Technology. It 'will likely undermine the US' position when negotiating with allies to implement complementary controls,' he added. 'Allies may not believe US policymakers if they are willing to trade away those same national security concerns for economic concessions – either from US companies or foreign governments.' A Nvidia spokesperson said the company follows US export rules, adding that while it hasn't shipped H20 chips to China for months, it hopes the rules will allow US companies to compete in China. AMD didn't respond to a request for comment. The Financial Times earlier reported the development. It followed a separate report from the same outlet that the Commerce Department had begun issuing H20 licences last week, days after Nvidia chief executive officer Jensen Huang met with Trump. Huang has lobbied long and hard for the lifting of restrictions, arguing that walling China off will only slow the spread of American technology and encourage local rivals such as Huawei Technologies Co. 'It's a strategic bargaining chip' that tightens Washington's grip on a critical tech sphere during trade negotiations with China, said Hebe Chen, an analyst with Vantage Markets in Melbourne. 'Over time, this hurdle for chips entering China will likely deter Nvidia and AMD from deeper expansion in the world's largest chip-importing market, while giving local Chinese producers a clear edge to capture market share and accelerate domestic semiconductor innovation,' Chen said If Washington goes ahead with the tax, it should funnel some capital to the United States – but not an enormous amount in relative terms. Both Nvidia and AMD have said it'll take time to ramp back up production of their China-specific products – even if orders return to previous levels, which is uncertain. Nvidia raked in US$4.6bil of revenue from the H20 in its quarter ended April 27 – days after new restrictions on shipping the AI accelerator to China were imposed. It said it had been unable to ship US$2.5bil of H20 China revenue in that period because of the new rules. That implies it would have gotten more than US$7bil in H20 sales to China during the period. If it can return to that level, the US government will stand to get about US$1bil a quarter from its deal. AMD could generate US$3bil to US$5bil of revenue this year if restrictions were lifted, Morgan Stanley estimates. Chinese alternatives such as Huawei's Ascend chips now account for 20% to 30% of domestic demand, it reckoned. 'The US government clearly needs the money given its deficits and eagerness to collect tariffs,' said Vey-Sern Ling, managing director at Union Bancaire Privee in Singapore. 'But the complication is China's accusations about H20 chips containing backdoors, which could be a negotiation tactic to highlight that the country is not that 'hard up' for US chips,' Ling added. — Bloomberg