惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
V
V2EX
GbyAI
GbyAI
Recent Announcements
Recent Announcements
Microsoft Security Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
Hugging Face - Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
Y
Y Combinator Blog
C
Check Point Blog
爱范儿
爱范儿
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
美团技术团队
雷峰网
雷峰网
IT之家
IT之家
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
V
Visual Studio Blog
Microsoft Azure Blog
Microsoft Azure Blog
MyScale Blog
MyScale Blog
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
罗磊的独立博客
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
S
Security Affairs
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
F
Fortinet All Blogs
K
KPMG report finds enterprise disconnect between AI and its ROI | CIO
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
H
Hacker News: Front Page
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
B
Blog
O
OpenAI News
C
Cisco Blogs
Simon Willison's Weblog
Simon Willison's Weblog
The Last Watchdog
The Last Watchdog
Hacker News: Ask HN
Hacker News: Ask HN
博客园_首页
人人都是产品经理
人人都是产品经理
C
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA
Recent Commits to openclaw:main
Recent Commits to openclaw:main
Help Net Security
Help Net Security
月光博客
月光博客
J
Java Code Geeks
L
LangChain Blog
博客园 - 司徒正美
Stack Overflow Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
Security Archives - TechRepublic
Security Archives - TechRepublic
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More

PYMNTS.com

Crypto Payments Are Back. Will Merchants Actually Care This Time? Labor Department Proposes Unified Joint Employer Standard B2B’s New Battlefield Is Everything Before the Button Amazon Targets the GLP-1 Gap Big Pharma Left Open LendingClub Signals Expanded Capabilities With Happen Bank Rebrand Microsoft Tests Mythos to Identify and Mitigate Vulnerabilities United Airlines Hikes Fares as Fuel Costs Surge OpenAI Images 2.0 Is a Real Leap With a Real Price Tag Morgan Stanley Says Gaming Could Score $22 Billion With AI FTC Shuts Down Alleged Healthcare Fraud Scheme Sam’s Club Offers eCommerce Shoppers Hour-or-Less Deliveries FinTechs Cut Staff as AI and Margins Redefine Growth JPMorganChase Extends Critical Industries Investment Program to Continental Europe OpenAI Lands $75 Million Investment From Robinhood Ventures House Bill Would Reduce Small Lenders’ Reporting Requirements Coinbase Lists tGBP to Expand Locally-Denominated Stablecoin Access BNY Names New Head for Payments/Trade Client Platform KnowBe4 Automates Global Cash Flow Via Flywire Partnership Treasury Calls for Programmable Financial Enforcement Across Crypto DeepSeek Seeks $20 Billion Valuation as Tech Giants Weigh Investment Google Accelerates Agentic AI Shift With New Enterprise Platform OpenAI Begins Briefing Governments on Cybersecurity Capabilities DeFi Security Suffers New Blow With $3 Million Volo Exploit Uninvited Users Access Anthropic’s Mythos AI Model Block and Uber Expand Partnership Across Several Global Markets OpenAI Pledges $1.5 Billion to PE Enterprise AI Project Podcast: Inside the $9 Billion DeFi Hack That’s Shaking Crypto’s Foundations Synchrony CFO Flags Momentum in Spending and Credit Banks Risk Slowing the Emerging Middle Market Firms Driving Growth Paysafe Expands Digital Wallet Availability Across 18 European Markets Bad Data Can Break Good AI in Payments 50% More Digital Shopping Days Put Parents at the Center of Retail’s Shift 65% Call Insurance Essential. Why Most Spending Isn’t So Clear-Cut Amazon Recasts Marketplace Fraud as a Broader Trust Problem Capital One’s Q1 Shifts Attention From Spending to Strategy Lawmakers Question JetBlue About Surveillance Pricing Allegations Payments Modernization Is Insurance’s Next Big Margin Engine How Visa Is Rewiring Bank Infrastructure for the AI Era Instant Payments Grow but the Real Barrier Is Human The Old-School Card Product Banks May Need Most 43% of SMBs Would Pay to Make Purchases in Installments The Real AI Edge in Payments Comes From Better Judgment In the Age of Agentic AI, Data Control Is Power Verizon’s Dan Schulman Tells CEOs to Be Open About AI Job Cuts Walmart Eyes Stores as Warehouse Space for Same-Day Delivery France’s CB Payments Network Aims to Take on Visa/Mastercard in EU QVC Was TikTok Shop Before TikTok Shop Loop Raises $95 Million to Bridge Supply Chain Data Gap Cursor Eyes $50 Billion Valuation as AI Coding Demand Surges Commercial Lending Rescues Regional Banks From Consumer Slowdown Anthropic and White House Aim to Make Peace in Friday Meeting Home Depot Buys SIMPL Automation to Support Same-Day Delivery The Riskiest Words in B2B: This Is How We’ve Always Done It France Urges Euro Stablecoins to Break Dollar Dependency Importers Prep for Monday Opening of Tariff Refund Portal Permitting Hurdles and Labor Shortages Threaten AI Data Center Timelines Token Freezes Force CFOs to Rethink Stablecoin Risk X Money Tests Whether Social Commerce Can Hold Consumer Deposits Anthropic Briefs EU Regulators on Mythos Cybersecurity Concerns Welcome to Vibe Ordering, ChatGPT Is Taking Your Order Now Nvidia Says AI Can Finally Make Quantum Computing Work QVC Files Chapter 11 to Slash Debt and Pursue Growth Uber Eats Lets Customers Return Their Retail Purchases Financial Officials Sound Alarm About Anthropic’s Banking Risk 71% of Billion-Dollar Firms Face Agent Identity Threats What If Clearing Had Its Stripe Moment? OpenAI Targets Pharma Giants With Purpose-Built AI Model California Claims Amazon Punishes Sellers for Lower Prices on Other Sites CFTC Chairman Says AI Helps Agency Run More Like a Business Global Finance Chiefs Call for Mythos Information Sharing Big Bank Earnings Show Digital Activity Drives Deposits OCC Clears JPMorgan Chase After Trade Surveillance Program Upgrade Accounts Receivable Gets an AI Upgrade BNY’s AI Strategy Signals a New Era of Platform Banking Bank of England Probes AI Threats to UK Financial Stability Rising AI Adoption Is Driving Up Enterprise Costs Google Faces EU Order to Share Search Data With Rivals Delivery Robots Lead Grab’s AI Expansion Circle Chief Says China Could Issue Stablecoin in 3 to 5 Years Amex Acquires Hyper to Boost AI and Expense Management Offerings Anthropic Ready to Offer Mythos to British Banks Issuers Face a New Reality as Credit Goes Real Time How Payments Gaps Are Limiting Deposit Growth at Community Banks AI May Run Payments but Humans Still Own the Risk 90% of Millennials Feel Pressure at the Grocery Store The New Checkout Is Where the Best Offer Wins Insurance Sector’s Private Credit Ties Has Investors Concerned Oil Price Spike Erodes Small Business Confidence, NFIB Says Synctera Looks to Beef Up Compliance With Cable Acquisition Velera Launches Cloud Platform to Modernize Credit Union Tech Kraken Lands $200 Million Investment From Deutsche Börse Walmart CFO Says Marketplace Revenue Up 20% Over 2025 The US Operationalized Stablecoins This Week, But Who’s Using Them? AI Is the New Sales Associate in Physical Retail Fed Finds Stablecoins Idle, Confirms PYMNTS Usage Gap BMO Accelerates Quantum Push With New Tech Institute Bank of France Pushes EU to Rein in Non-Euro-Backed Stablecoins Perplexity Uses Plaid to Personalize Financial Insights Blackstone Accelerates Push to Lead AI Infrastructure Boom Feds Warn Major Banks of Anthropic Mythos Cyber Threat
Congress Moves to Give FinTechs Direct Fed Payment Access
PYMNTS · 2026-04-23 · via PYMNTS.com

The future of payments infrastructure may hinge less on technology than on who is permitted to connect to it.

Legislation introduced in the U.S. House this week, known as the Payments Access and Consumer Efficiency Act (PACE Act), would establish a federal registration pathway for nonbank providers seeking direct access to the Federal Reserve’s core payment systems, including Fedwire, the FedNow® Service and ACH.

The proposal lands as real-time capabilities and settlement certainty shift from competitive advantages to baseline expectations across the digital economy.

The PACE Act creates a new designation, “registered covered providers,” that would allow qualifying firms to apply for a “payments reserve account” at a Federal Reserve Bank, granting connectivity to Fedwire Funds Service, FedNow Service and FedACH Services, placing nonbank payment firms on more equal footing with insured depository institutions in terms of infrastructure access.

The bill does not grant a bank charter, nor does it remove oversight. Instead, it constructs an optional federal supervisory regime under the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), designed to complement existing state licensing frameworks.

There’s some gatekeeping in the mix: Firms must already operate at scale, holding at least 40 state money transmitter licenses or equivalent charters, before they can apply for registration.

Advertisement: Scroll to Continue

A Federal Framework With Guardrails

The statutory language places emphasis on prudence and operational discipline. Section 3 of the bill sets out the registration process and restricts approval to applicants that demonstrate sufficient financial resources, governance, technical capacity and compliance with the Bank Secrecy Act. It also requires, per the Act’s verbiage, that the applicant show “benefit to the public, including with respect to innovation, competition, and enabling widespread access and use of payment services.”

Once admitted, providers face explicit balance sheet constraints. Section 4 requires that “a registered covered provider shall maintain identifiable reserves backing outstanding payment obligations on at least a 1 to 1 basis.” Those reserves must be held in cash, deposits, short-term Treasurys or similarly liquid instruments.

The provision reflects a clear attempt to align nonbank payment firms with the liquidity discipline typically associated with deposit-taking institutions, without formally extending deposit insurance.

Operational transparency is also codified. The Act mandates detailed recordkeeping of both customer obligations and reserve holdings, while requiring segregation of customer funds in custody arrangements. Risk management standards are further tied to existing federal frameworks, including capital and liquidity rules derived from stablecoin regulation regimes, suggesting a convergence of policy approaches across payments and digital asset oversight.

The legislation extends beyond prudential requirements into conduct standards. Registered providers would be subject to the Equal Credit Opportunity Act and barred from denying service on the basis of protected beliefs or affiliations.

Toward a National Payments System

The most consequential element of the PACE Act lies in its approach to infrastructure access. Section 9 directs that a registered provider may request a payments reserve account from the Federal Reserve, and that such access should be granted “in the same manner and to the same extent” as for insured depository institutions.

For banks, this raises questions about the durability of a long-standing structural advantage. Direct access to Fed rails has historically been tied to charter status, reinforcing the centrality of banks in payment intermediation.

The PACE Act introduces a pathway that could reduce reliance on sponsor banks, particularly for firms operating at scale in digital wallets, merchant acquiring or cross-border flows.

For FinTechs already operating at scale, the benefits are more immediate. Direct settlement could reduce latency, simplify reconciliation and lower dependency risks tied to intermediary institutions. These operational gains have already been cited as drivers of competitiveness in real-time payment environments.

Yet the national system envisioned by the Act introduces its own complications. Supervisory responsibilities would expand, with the OCC overseeing entities that combine elements of technology platforms and financial intermediaries. Coordination between federal and state regulators would remain necessary.

The bill addresses failure scenarios with notable specificity. In the event of insolvency, customer claims tied to payment obligations are given priority behind administrative expenses, reinforcing the principle that user funds should be protected ahead of general creditors.

At the same time, the exclusion of certain custodial assets from bankruptcy estates introduces legal distinctions that may require further clarification in practice.

The legislation signals a shift in how infrastructure is conceived. Connectivity is no longer assumed to be the exclusive domain of chartered institutions. It is becoming a regulated capability, extended under conditions that reflect both opportunity and constraint.