Regulatory Capital: Interagency FAQs on Tokenized Securities | OCC

https://occ.gov/news-issuances/bulletins/2026/bulletin-2026-7.html
Success
Service Digital Assets 88% Investment Services 90%
Specialism Capital Adequacy 92% Prudential Standards 89%
2026-03-06 18:07:44 · pdonofrio@vixio.com
ID
2937968
GUID
74b659b97c3543445afb02913df7ad25

Classification

Service
Digital Assets (88%)

The update addresses regulatory capital treatment of tokenized securities for OCC-supervised banks, establishing that tokenized forms receive identical treatment to non-tokenized securities under capital rules.

Investment Services (90%)

Mandatory inheritance: Digital Assets triggers automatic co-tagging of Investment Services as the parent category, and the guidance directly concerns how banks handle tokenized securities as investment assets.

Specialism
Capital Adequacy (92%)

The update directly addresses regulatory capital treatment of tokenized securities, clarifying how blockchain-based securities are classified under capital adequacy rules.

Prudential Standards (89%)

Mandatory inheritance: Capital Adequacy is a child of Prudential Standards, so Prudential Standards must be raised as the secondary tag.

The OCC, FDIC, and Federal Reserve Board are issuing these frequently asked questions (FAQ) to clarify the regulatory capital treatment of tokenized securities.

Pipeline Progress

🔄 Pipeline Journey

Queued 17:33:29
+2047s
Metadata 18:07:36
+0s
S3 Content 18:07:36
+0s
Extracted 18:07:36
+4s
LLM Gen 18:07:40
+4s
Stored 18:07:44
TITLE: United States Banking Regulators Issue Guidance on Regulatory Capital Treatment of Tokenized Securities BODY: On March 5, 2026, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve, and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (collectively, the agencies) issued frequently asked questions (FAQs) clarifying the regulatory capital treatment of tokenized securities for all OCC-supervised banks. The agencies clarified that the technologies used to issue and transact in a security do not generally impact its regulatory capital treatment. Specifically, the capital rule does not provide different treatment based on whether permissioned or permissionless blockchains are used. An "eligible tokenized security"—defined as a tokenized security that confers legal rights identical to those of the non-tokenized form of the security under applicable law—should be treated in the same manner for regulatory capital purposes as the non-tokenized form of the security would be treated. This approach ensures regulatory parity between traditional and tokenized securities. Additionally, an eligible tokenized security that satisfies the definition of "financial collateral" under 12 CFR 3.2 would qualify as financial collateral and be recognised by banking organisations as a credit risk mitigant, provided all other relevant requirements in the capital rule are met. The guidance applies to all OCC-supervised banks with exposures to tokenized securities, including national banks, federal savings associations, and federal branches and agencies of foreign banking organisations. The FAQs are available as a PDF document. For further information, banks may contact Margot Schwadron, Director, or Diana Wei, Risk Expert, Capital Policy, at (202) 649-6370, or David Stankiewicz, Director, Financial Technology, at (202) 649-7299. **Reference:** Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, OCC Bulletin 2026-7 (March 5, 2026)
  • Scraped:2026-03-06 18:07:44
  • Created:2026-03-06 18:07:44
  • By:pdonofrio@vixio.com (38)