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Signature’s crypto clients told to close their accounts by April 5: Report

Any crypto deposits not transferred to another bank by April 5 will be liquidated and a check mailed to the client's address.

Signature Bank’s cryptocurrency clients have been reportedly given until April 5 to take their funds out and find another bank, or have their accounts closed by the federal regulator.

According to reports, a United States Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) spokesperson said on March 28 that the agency was “reaching out to depositors from Signature whose deposits were not included in NYCB’s bid, confirming that these deposits belonged to digital asset clients.

Depositors who have their accounts closed will receive a check to their registered address, so anyone with funds held with Signature but unable to transfer them out should at least ensure their registered address is up-to-date.

Cointelegraph has reached out to the FDIC for confirmation but did not hear back by the time of publication.

While New York Community Bancorp (NYCB) bought most of the deposits and loans held by Signature Bank on March 19, the deal with the FDIC did not include “approximately $4 billion of deposits related to the former Signature Bank’s digital banking business.”

Related: Crypto-friendly banks mismanaged traditional risks, FDIC head tells Senate hearing

Also excluded from the deal was Signature’s payments platform Signet, which is powered by blockchain technology to facilitate real-time payments with no transaction fees or limits. The fate of Signet is still currently uncertain.

New York-based Signature was closed by New York regulators on March 12, amid concern that it was experiencing a bank run and posed a “systemic risk” to the U.S. economy.

The FDIC was appointed as the receiver of the bank, which meant that it was tasked with administering the funds and property connected to it.

Banks interested in acquiring the assets of Signature were asked to submit bids to the FDIC by March 17, with the agency reportedly only considering bids from those with an existing bank charter.

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OCC Grants Crypto Firm Paxos ‘Conditional Approval’ for US Bank Charter

OCC Grants Crypto Firm Paxos ‘Conditional Approval’ for US Bank CharterThe digital currency and stablecoin issuer Paxos has been granted conditional approval for a bank charter under the Paxos National Trust in New York. The U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency issued a preliminary conditional approval which means the regulating entity still has to authorize the firm’s future banking plans. Paxos Granted Preliminary […]

Little-known Canadian crypto firm Matador adds Bitcoin to its books

Avanti Financial raises $37 million to launch institutional crypto bank

The digital asset bank will be aimed at institutional investors only, and there is no exchange planned.

The Avanti Financial Group has announced that it has raised $37 million in a Series A round, bringing the company closer to launch as a digital asset bank.

In a March 25 announcement, Avanti stated that it will use the proceeds to fund the required regulatory capital needed for launch, in addition to funding development and other operating expenses. The round brings the total amount raised to $44 million.

Participants in the round are a who’s who of institutional investors including Coinbase Ventures, Binance.US, Morgan Creek Digital, Madison Paige Ventures, AP Capital, and Susquehanna Private Equity Investments, in addition to individuals including Trace Mayer and some of Avanti’s executives and directors. The University of Wyoming Foundation also contributed to the funding round.

Avanti was founded in 2020 as a Wyoming bank engineered to serve as a regulatory compliant bridge between U.S. dollar payments systems and digital assets. The firm first gained bank charter status from the state of Wyoming in October 2020 and was the second crypto company to become a bank after Kraken Financial which received the bank charter in September of the same year.

Founder and CEO of Avanti Financial, Caitlin Long, stated that the firm has received more than 2,500 inbound customer inquiries since announcing its bank charter approval and looks forward to starting to serve clients later this year. She did not reveal any details about a launch date but mentioned that a fully regulated dollar-pegged stablecoin was in the pipeline.

“Our roadmap includes offering API-based U.S. dollar payment services for wires, ACH and SWIFT; issuance of our tokenized, programmable U.S. dollar called Avit; and custody and on-/off-ramp services for bitcoin and other digital assets.”

In an interview with Cointelegraph in September 2020, Caitlin Long confirmed that Avanti has no intentions of becoming an exchange and will be for institutional investors only.

Early Bitcoin adopter and entrepreneur Trace Mayer, who formed the consortium that led Avanti's Series A, stated that Avanti is extremely well-positioned to address the need for legally compliant operators in the digital asset industry as markets mature.

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