Crypto firms may turn to ‘shadow banks’ following major collapses — Molly White

Share This Post

Speaking at the SXSW conference in Austin, Molly White compared crypto companies’ current predicament to that in 2017 and 2018, when they had “trouble accessing banking”.

In the wake of three major banks with ties to crypto firms collapsing, software engineer Molly White believes companies now looking at banking options may have to face “shadier” solutions.

Speaking on March 14 at a South by Southwest (SXSW) panel in Austin, Texas on ‘Popping the Web3 Bubble’, White opined that crypto firms’ options following the collapse of the crypto-friendly Signature and Silvergate banks may drive them metaphorically underground. White compared the situation to that in 2017 and 2018, when crypto projects had “trouble accessing banking” with less knowledge and acceptance from institutions.

“There were only a handful of U.S. banks that were really game to take crypto clients,” said White. “With Signature and Silvergate both out of the picture, I think that’s going to be very impactful on the crypto industry [which] still really needs access to traditional finance and to U.S. banking rails.”

She added:

“Without [Signature and Silvergate], I think the crypto industry is going to be having a tough time. They’re either going to have to find other banks that are willing to work with them, which was already tough, and will probably only be tougher after the collapses of these banks, or they’re going to have to turn to some of the sort of shadier shadow banks.”

Molly White and Gerrit De Vynck speaking at SXSW in Austin on March 14

Many in and out of the space have claimed the New York Department of Financial Services’ shutdown of Signature Bank was an overreach from authorities due to the firm’s connection to crypto companies. Signature board member and former U.S. Representative Barney Frank suggested U.S. government officials were attempting to send a “strong anti-crypto message” in closing the bank, while the New York regulator reportedly said Signature failed to provide “reliable and consistent data” on its activities.

Related: Recent contagion was ‘TradFi to crypto’ and not vice versa — Circle policy director

The SXSW conference in Austin will be running until March 19 and feature many speakers from the crypto and blockchain space. Cointelegraph released an interview with activist and cybersecurity expert Chelsea Manning on how blockchain technology can be used to address challenges with artificial intelligence.

Read Entire Article
spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Related Posts

$33.14 Billion At Risk If The Bitcoin Price Hits $72,462, Here’s Why

Crypto analyst Ash Crypto has alerted the crypto community that $3314 billion is at risk if the Bitcoin price reaches $72,462 This relates to the short positions that could be liquidated if the

Post halving, Bitcoin miners are choosing between hodling BTC and upgrading to AI

After the Bitcoin halving took place in April, major Bitcoin miners have increasingly started choosing one of two strategies — either hodl the BTC they mine or gear up with artificial intelligence

Trial Postponed for Jailed Ex-US Federal Agent After Court No-Show

A Nigerian court has adjourned the trial of Tigran Gambaryan, a jailed Binance executive, due to his illness Gambaryan, a US citizen and former federal agent, missed a scheduled court appearance

Ripple CEO Praises the State of Cryptocurrency Regulation in Brazil

Brad Garlinghouse, CEO of Ripple, a payments and cryptocurrency service provider, has praised the state of cryptocurrency regulation in Brazil, one of the largest crypto markets in Latam In an

Beyond Hacks: Understanding and managing economic risks in DeFi

The following is a guest article from Vincent Maliepaard, Marketing Director at IntoTheBlock Economic risks have led to nearly $60 billion in losses across DeFi protocols While this number may seem

Powell’s Legacy, the Ethics of ‘Doxing’, and Uptober or Rektober

This editorial is from last week’s edition of the newsletter Week in Review Subscribe to the newsletter to get this weekly editorial the second it’s finished The newsletter also includes the