House Financial Services Committee ranking Democrat Rep. Maxine Waters sent a formal letter Thursday to Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City President Jeff Schmid, demanding answers on why Kraken’s banking subsidiary was granted a Federal Reserve master account, and what that access actually means in practice.
Waters set an April 10 response deadline, asking Schmid to detail which Fed services Kraken can access, what restrictions apply, and what anti-money laundering and consumer protection measures were evaluated before approval.
This is not routine congressional oversight. It is a direct challenge to the legitimacy of the most consequential crypto banking decision the Federal Reserve has made.
Key Takeaways:
- Legislative Pressure: Rep. Maxine Waters has demanded the Kansas City Fed respond by April 10, outlining the scope, restrictions, and risk controls behind Kraken Financial’s master account approval.
- Kraken’s Position: Kraken Financial — a Wyoming SPDI operating under a full-reserve, no-lending model — became the first crypto-native firm to secure Fed master account access, granted as a one-year pilot on March 4, 2026.
- What’s at Stake: The account gives Kraken direct access to Fedwire, placing a crypto exchange on the same payment rails as commercial banks and credit unions — a structural shift that traditional banking groups are calling premature and opaque.
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What Waters Is Actually Demanding
Congressional scrutiny of the Kansas City Fed’s approval process centers on one core complaint: the Fed disclosed almost nothing.
The Kansas City Fed’s press release explicitly cited business confidentiality as the reason for withholding details about which services Kraken can access, a stance Waters called insufficient given the stakes.
Waters wrote that “the Kansas City Fed’s announcement does not disclose specific information about Kraken’s access to the range of Federal Reserve financial services due to the confidentiality of business information provided by applicants.”
Her letter demands specifics: which Fedwire functions, what ACH access, which safeguards, and how the approval aligns with existing statutory frameworks.
The account in question is a limited-purpose, or “skinny”, master account, granting Kraken Financial Tier 3 access to Fedwire and potentially ACH for reserve holdings and settlements.
It does not include access to Fed liquidity facilities. Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman described the arrangement at an American Bankers Association conference on March 11 as a learning exercise: “We’re trying to learn,” she said, acknowledging the Fed could intervene if behaviors proved inconsistent.
Kraken Financial operates as a Payward subsidiary under Wyoming’s Special Purpose Depository Institution framework, full-reserve, no lending, no FDIC insurance. Every deposit is backed 1:1. That structure was central to the approval argument, but it has not quieted critics.
Bank Policy Institute policy counsel Paige Pidano Paridon stated the approval “ignores public comment that the Federal Reserve sought on this framework, and it was issued with no transparency into the process for approval or the risk mitigants.” The Fed had closed a public comment period on a crypto payment prototype account proposal less than one month before the March 4 approval, a timeline that has amplified banking sector frustration.
What to Watch
The deeper signal is precedent. Custodia Bank, also a Wyoming SPDI, was denied a master account in 2023 after years of litigation. Kraken’s approval on the same institutional framework, without a finalized Fed policy, means the criteria for access remain effectively opaque, which is precisely what Waters is targeting.
Transparency requirements that emerge from this congressional exchange could shape whether any future crypto firm can replicate Kraken’s path, or whether this pilot becomes a one-off carve-out.
The April 10 deadline for Kansas City Fed President Schmid’s response to Waters is the immediate inflection point. If Schmid discloses detailed service access and risk protocols, it normalizes the approval and weakens the transparency critique.
If he cites confidentiality and deflects, the congressional pressure escalates, potentially triggering formal committee hearings that put the entire Fed crypto banking framework under public examination.
The one-year pilot evaluation and Kraken’s IPO timeline are moving in parallel. How the Fed answers Congress will determine whether Kraken’s master account becomes the template for crypto banking access, or the last one approved before the window closes.
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