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Kraken's banking arm becomes first crypto firm to secure payments account with Fed
Cryptocurrency exchange Kraken's banking unit has gained access to the Federal Reserve's payments system through a limited-purpose account, the first U.S. digital-asset bank to do so as the sector deepens its reach into mainstream finance. Through its Fed master account, Kraken Financial can link directly to core U.S. payment systems such as Fedwire, avoiding intermediary banks and enabling faster, more efficient fiat transfers for institutional clients, while reducing operational complexity and costs, the company said in a blog post on Wednesday. While Kraken would not receive the wider range of privileges granted ... (full story)
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From businesswire.com|Mar 4, 2026Payward, a unified financial infrastructure platform powering Kraken, today announced that Kraken Financial, its Wyoming-chartered bank, has been granted a Federal Reserve master ...
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From prnewswire.com|Mar 4, 2026|2 commentsEconomic activity in the services sector continued to expand in February, say the nation's purchasing and supply executives in the latest ISM® Services PMI® Report. The Services ...
From bankofcanada.ca|Mar 4, 2026Good morning. It’s a pleasure to be here—and it’s great to see such an impressive mix of market participants, policy-makers and practitioners. I’m looking forward to the fireside chat, so I’ll keep my remarks short to leave time for discussion. Conversations like this matter—especially when uncertainty is high and we’re all trying to manage the risks. As we speak, the actions taken against Iran by Israel and the United States have increased volatility in energy and financial markets and there is considerable uncertainty about the duration and fallout of this conflict. My focus today will be on some longer-term changes we’re seeing in the financial system. And I’m here today wearing two hats: as Governor of the Bank of Canada and as Chair of the Financial Stability Board’s Standing Committee on Assessment of Vulnerabilities (FSB SCAV). SCAV’s role isn’t to predict the next financial crisis or prescribe policy. It’s to step back and connect the dots across markets and jurisdictions to identify the systemic vulnerabilities. The goal is to understand the pressure points so they don’t become fractures. The global reach of the FSB complements the work of domestic central banks and regulators. It also complements the work of the private sector. Market participants manage the risks they face individually. But systemic risks can build beyond the sight line of any single firm. We all have a stake in a well-functioning financial system that channels savings into productive investments and helps households and businesses manage their risks. But to work well, the financial system needs a competitive marketplace with clear rules and good information. And because money moves across borders, the perspective needs to be global, with a degree of international coordination.
Identifying pressure points in a changing financial system The rise of non-bank players, like hedge funds and private credit, in the global financial system has brought clear benefits by adding liquidity and flexibility to debt markets. But the shift away from the regulated banking sector has also increased risks to financial stability. Most investment firms do a good job of managing their own risks, but they can’t see dangers building across markets and borders. The Financial Stability Board, a global body, helps connect the dots to identify systemic vulnerabilities through its Standing Committee on Assessment of Vulnerabilities (SCAV). Today’s economic landscape has increased the urgency of this work: Just in | Bank of Canada Governor Macklem warns that the increasing risks from non-bank entities in global debt markets may be outpacing our capacity to comprehend and address them. Just in | Bank of Canada Governor Macklem expresses concern over potential market shocks that could increase interest rate volatility.
From cnbc.com|Mar 4, 2026President Donald Trump has thrown his support behind crypto firms in their high-stakes battle with U.S. banks over whether they can offer interest-like returns on stablecoins. ...
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