Fed’s Bowman Pushes for Crypto Literacy and Regulatory Shift

- Fed VC Michelle Bowman urged regulators to embrace the role of crypto in banking.
- The GENIUS Act sets clear licensing and reserve standards for stablecoin issuers.
- Trump-era policy shift shows Fed moving from skepticism to shaping digital finance.
Federal Reserve Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman proposed that bank regulators drop their ‘overly cautious mindset’ toward digital assets. In a keynote at the Wyoming Blockchain Symposium, she suggested that the Fed staff could hold small amounts of crypto to gain a better understanding of what they’re regulating.
Bowman drew a vivid analogy, likening crypto literacy to learning how to ski. “I wouldn’t trust someone to teach me to ski if they’d never put on skis,” she said, pointing out that reading about digital assets is no substitute for hands-on experience. Allowing limited ownership, she argued, could remove barriers to hiring skilled examiners and help current staff build practical expertise.
Warning that banks clinging to traditional models could risk losing relevance in a financial system where tokenization and stablecoins are rapidly becoming integral. In her view, both regulators and institutions either embrace innovation and build a durable framework or stand still and watch technology bypass them entirely.
The GENIUS Act and Regulatory Reset
Her comments come as she takes a leading role in shaping rules under the newly enacted Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins (GENIUS) Act. Signed in July, the law sets licensing, reserve, and oversight standards for stablecoin issuers, including requirements that highly liquid assets back them.
The Treasury added momentum this week by issuing a public request for comment, putting regulators on a fast track to finalize the framework. As the Fed’s top banking supervisor, Bowman will be instrumental in shaping supervisory policies for issuers and the banks that engage with them.
Trump-Aligned Shift in Culture
Bowman’s ascent also reflects a broader cultural reset at the Fed under a Trump-aligned policy environment. Nominated in March, she was confirmed by the Senate on June 4 and sworn in on June 9—taking over from Michael Barr.
Since then, the central bank has unwound several crypto-skeptical guardrails. In April, the Fed withdrew prior guidance that had urged banks to seek advance approval for crypto and dollar token activities. Recently, it announced the closure of its dedicated “novel activities” supervision program, shifting oversight back into standard processes.
The White House is pushing in the same direction. On Aug. 7, President Trump signed an executive order instructing regulators to investigate “debanking” claims and address any politically motivated account closures, underscoring a friendlier stance toward crypto clients. That political tailwind was evident at the Wyoming Blockchain Symposium, which ran alongside the Jackson Hole meetings and drew top policymakers eager to debate the new direction.
Related: Will the GENIUS Act Secure U.S. Stablecoin Global Dominance?
Empathy or Risk?
Bowman’s de minimis proposal would mark a notable shift in ethics policy. After a 2020 trading scandal, the Fed barred senior officials in 2022 from owning cryptocurrencies (among other assets), expanded coverage in 2024, and has emphasized strict conflict-of-interest controls. Bowman’s case is that modest, disclosed holdings could improve recruitment of examiners with real-world expertise and yield better rulemaking through lived experience.
The benefit, she suggested, outweighs the risk if tightly constrained. On the other hand, ethics FAQs counter that the Fed’s regime lacks de minimis exemptions for certain prohibited assets, illustrating how hard-line the baseline has been. The policy question, then, is whether small personal stakes will produce smarter, more nuanced rules or blur the lines between private interest and public duty. What is clear, though, is the regulatory trajectory: the U.S. is moving from blanket skepticism to “shape it, don’t shun it.”
As GENIUS Act rulemaking begins, Bowman’s stance signals the Fed’s move to embrace blockchains and tokenized rails, while insisting on safety, soundness, and speed. Whether that maturity comes via empathy or invites new conflicts will be decided in the fine print the Fed writes next.