EDX Markets, a cryptocurrency exchange backed by Citadel Securities, Fidelity, and Charles Schwab, has submitted an application to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency for a national trust bank charter. The application represents a significant step in the company’s efforts to broaden the range of services it offers to institutional clients. If granted, the charter would position EDX as a regulated trust entity operating within the traditional financial framework.
Under the proposed structure, the trust entity would be kept structurally separate from EDX’s core trading platform. This separation is designed to provide an additional layer of regulatory clarity and operational independence. The approved charter would enable the firm to offer custody, asset management, and principal trading services through the regulated entity.
The application arrives at a time when competition among crypto firms for trust bank charters is intensifying. Companies across the digital asset sector are pursuing similar designations in order to provide custody and settlement services that align with the safeguards found in conventional financial markets. Securing such a charter is widely seen as a means of attracting large financial institutions that require regulated infrastructure.
EDX Markets was established with the backing of major traditional finance players, giving it a distinct profile among crypto exchanges. The involvement of firms such as Citadel Securities, Fidelity, and Charles Schwab has positioned EDX as a platform oriented toward institutional participation rather than retail trading. Pursuing a trust bank charter is consistent with that institutional focus and reflects broader efforts to integrate digital asset markets with established regulatory standards.
The outcome of the application now rests with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, which oversees the granting of national bank and trust charters in the United States. Approval would allow EDX to operate with a level of regulatory standing that mirrors structures long used in traditional asset markets. The decision could have implications for how other crypto firms approach their own regulatory strategies going forward.
Originally reported by CoinDesk.
