According to The Block, Trump-linked World Liberty Financial (WLF) is nearing approval for a federal trust charter from the US Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC). If approved, the charter would let WLF issue and redeem its dollar stablecoin, USD1, under a single federal regulator, rather than relying on the state-by-state patchwork of money transmitter licenses (MTLs) that most issuers currently depend on. This is the latest in a string of issuers trying to fit stablecoin operations into a federal “trust” wrapper, following momentum from the GENIUS Act framework. It’s worth noting that an OCC trust charter is not the same as an ordinary national bank charter—it cannot accept FDIC-insured deposits, but it can legally custody and settle stablecoin reserves at the federal level.
Editorial Take: What This Means for USDT Card Users
Bottom line first: if you’re holding a virtual card funded with USDT and used mainly on Asia-Pacific rails, this news changes essentially nothing about your experience over the next 30 days. USD1 and USDT are two separate issuance systems. The OCC granting a charter to WLF does not change Tether’s reserve structure, nor does it change the settlement path for the ₮ you load onto MPCard or Bybit Card.
The real signal is further upstream: the US is progressively consolidating “who is eligible to issue a widely used dollar stablecoin” into a federal chartering system. That has indirect implications for the card issuance landscape over the next 12 months—US-facing issuers (Coinbase, Circle-affiliated products) will likely lean more toward settling in federally regulated stablecoins, and USDT’s “usability” within the US will stay under long-term pressure. This is also why we’ve kept the Asia Elite variant featured in our MPCard review as our editorial pick—its settlement logic doesn’t depend on US domestic compliance rails to begin with, so this regulatory variable transmits to it more weakly.
Expected timelines for different users:
- Users funding purely with USDT and spending in Asia-Pacific: no action needed at the 7/30/90-day marks.
- Users relying on US-region subscriptions (ChatGPT Plus, Cursor): watch over the next 90 days whether US-facing issuers shift their settlement currency. This is a slow-moving variable, not an urgent one.
- Users holding USD1 or considering exposure to WLF ecosystem products: a charter “nearing approval” is not the same as an approved charter—don’t position ahead of the fact.
Historical Comparison: Not the First Attempt to “Get a Charter and Bolt On a Card”
This becomes clearer when set against two historical reference points.
Anchorage received its OCC trust charter in 2021—it was the first federally chartered crypto trust bank, but its business expansion after getting the charter fell well short of expectations. A regulatory charter does not equal commercial success. WLF will face the same “what do we do once we have the charter” question this time around.
USDC briefly de-pegged in 2023 due to Silicon Valley Bank—that episode reminded everyone that the banking relationships behind reserve custody matter far more than a stablecoin’s logo. The OCC trust charter is specifically aimed at “bringing reserve custody under federal oversight,” which directly addresses the pain point exposed in 2023.
The similarity: both cases are about fitting crypto assets into traditional financial regulatory frameworks. The difference: this time there’s a clear political dimension (the Trump connection), and OCC’s regulatory posture in 2021 versus 2026 is not consistent—the former was a period of loose experimentation, while the latter follows the systematic tightening that came with the GENIUS Act’s legislative rollout. In other words, this charter carries more weight and more binding force than Anchorage’s did.
Regulatory Implications: The Gray Zone at the Edge of Federal Consolidation
The point Chinese-speaking readers should take away most: US stablecoin regulation is moving from a “patchwork of state charters” toward a “single federal point.” That means—
- Clearly permitted: issuers holding a federal trust/banking charter issuing and redeeming stablecoins within the US.
- Gray zone: offshore-issued, non-US-chartered stablecoins like USDT, in US-domestic payment/card-issuance contexts. It isn’t explicitly banned, but it will find it increasingly hard to gain access through regulated US-licensed institutions.
- Unaffected: your everyday behavior of funding a virtual card with USDT in the Asia-Pacific region or anywhere outside mainland China—this already sits outside the reach of US regulation.
If you’re concerned about compliance boundaries in your own jurisdiction, compare the US compliance guide to see the tightening logic playing out in the US market, then look at the Hong Kong compliance guide and Singapore compliance guide—Asia-Pacific jurisdictions run on an independent logic when it comes to “which stablecoin is acceptable,” and that logic won’t shift just because of a single OCC charter.
Key Milestones Worth Watching Next
- Whether the OCC formally announces WLF’s approval—“nearing approval” and “approved” can be months apart. Rely on the official listing at the OCC charter page, not secondhand interpretations.
- Whether USD1 gets adopted as a settlement currency by any mainstream card issuer—this is the signal that would actually make it relevant to “card rails.”
- The pace of implementation for GENIUS Act supporting rules—the details of the federal framework will determine the real living space for offshore stablecoins.
- Whether Tether makes any statement about its US market strategy—USDT’s issuer response would affect the card in your hand more directly than WLF’s charter ever could.
Editorial Recommendations
- Users holding Asia-Pacific-rail USDT cards like MPCard or Bybit Card: no action needed. This is news about the US stablecoin issuance landscape, not about your funding channel.
- Users currently shopping for a stablecoin virtual card: add “does settlement depend on US-domestic compliance rails” as one of your selection criteria, using the comparison logic in our 2026 USDT Card Top 5 as a reference, and favor Asia-Pacific rails where regulatory transmission is weaker.
- What not to do: don’t stockpile USD1 or jump into WLF ecosystem products just because “a Trump-linked stablecoin is getting a charter”—“nearing approval” is reporting language, not a done deal, and none of this constitutes investment or currency-swap advice.
One line to close: this news matters, but its significance sits at the “industry structure” level, not the “what should you change this month” level. File it in your watchlist and check back next month on whether the OCC actually issues the announcement.