U.S. Regulator OCC Clarifies How Banks Can Handle Network 'Gas Fees'
The U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency issued new policy guidance that lays out how national banks can maintain crypto assets to be used for the payment of blockchain networks' "gas fees."
In what's known as "interpretive letter No. 1186," the agency said Tuesday that the banks can keep on their balance sheets digital assets they think will reasonably be required for their operations.
Blockchain networks routinely require the use of their own specific token as a fee for transactions, so banks that wish to handle such activity need to have the necessary assets on-hand. Activity "explicitly allowed under the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act" will require banks needing to pay network fees as an agent for customers or as part of its custody operations, the letter said.
The need for banks "to pay network fees to facilitate otherwise permissible crypto-asset activities and to hold, as principal, amounts of crypto-assets on balance sheet necessary to pay network fees for which the bank anticipates a reasonably foreseeable need is permissible for the bank," the OCC concluded
U.S. banking regulators — also including the Federal Reserve, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and the wider Treasury Department — are already working on writing new regulations to govern stablecoin issuers and activity, based on the new GENIUS Act requirements. But those rules aren't yet in place for the law approved earlier this year.
The OCC has reversed years of hesitation about letting regulated banks engage in digital assets activity with the arrival of the pro-crypto administration of President Donald Trump. The agency is now run by Trump appointee Jonathan Gould, who was confirmed by the Senate in July.
Read More: What Are Ethereum Gas Fees?
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
XRP News Update: Regulatory Relaxation Opens Door to Debut XRP ETF on NYSE
- Bitwise XRP ETF , first U.S. fund tracking XRP , launches on NYSE Nov 20, 2025, with 0.34% fee and initial $500M fee waiver. - XRP's $120B market cap and 13-year history highlight its role in cross-border payments, aligning with SEC's shifting regulatory focus. - SEC's 30% drop in 2025 enforcement actions and Coinbase case dismissal signal regulatory easing, boosting crypto fund innovation. - Grayscale faces challenges with declining GBTC assets and new Bitcoin Mini Trust, reflecting competitive pressure

Bitcoin News Today: Bitcoin Drops Under $100K, Sparking Discussion—Is This Surrender or a Trigger for Change?
- Bitcoin fell below $100,000, triggering market fear and shifting focus to critical support levels at $87,800 and $92,000. - Technical indicators show bearish bias, with sellers dominating despite potential 2026 rebound hopes from Bitwise's Matt Hougan. - Santiment predicts a November rally as weak hands capitulate, while broader crypto markets mirror Bitcoin's weakness near support levels. - Diverging analyst views highlight uncertainty, with oversold RSI and failed $100,000 retests deepening bearish sen

AI Transforms Online Identities, Yet Security Risks Pose Challenges for Professional Platforms
- AI-powered tools like Pic-Time's facial/object search redefine digital identity management, boosting user engagement by 54% through optimized visual content curation. - LinkedIn's integration with Factors.ai enables B2B marketers to track online presence impact, achieving 3.6x more companies reached and 43% lower cost per acquisition. - UK security services warn of Chinese-linked LinkedIn espionage targeting political circles, highlighting risks in professional networking platforms' dual role as connecti

DOGE Net Position Jumps With a Sharp 2B Spike as Price Holds Near $0.20

