Trump tells Fed to consider fintech access to payment accounts


U.S. President Donald Trump speaks to the press aboard Air Force One enroute to the U.S. following his official visit with President Xi Jinping in China, May 15, 2026. REUTERS/Evan Vucci

May 19 (Reuters) - U.S. President ⁠Donald Trump signed an executive order on Tuesday calling ⁠on regulators and the Federal Reserve to review rules ‌that may be stifling financial innovation, including whether the central bank could expand fintech access to its payment rails, the systems that move money between banks.

The ​order asks the Fed to join other ⁠regulators in reviewing policies ⁠that could be updated to support fintech growth. It also calls ⁠on ‌the Fed to examine its approach to granting access to payment accounts and services, and to consider options ⁠for expanding such access to fintechs and other ​non-bank firms.

Access to ‌so-called "master accounts" by non-traditional financial firms has drawn increasing ⁠attention at the ​Fed, as several fintechs have applied or plan to seek access. Fed master accounts are often likened to bank accounts for banks, ⁠allowing holders to move funds directly through ​the Fed's payment system.

Crypto exchange Kraken was granted a Fed master account in March, giving it access to the central bank's wholesale ⁠payments system, Fedwire, and the ability to hold limited balances overnight. Crypto firms Ripple, Anchorage Digital and fintech money transfer company Wise also hope to win master accounts, according to public ​information.

The Fed has previously signaled it will ⁠open its payment rails to more crypto and fintech firms. In ​December, it sought feedbackon a potential new ‌type of payment account with restrictions ​similar to those imposed on Kraken's.

(Reporting by Costas Pitas, Pete Schroeder and Hannah Lang; Editing by Sanjeev Miglani)

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