A Startup Just Got OCC Approval to Build a National Bank Designed Around Stablecoins and AI From the Ground Up
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Augustus Bank N.A. has received conditional approval from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency under the GENIUS Act, moving the Dallas-based startup a couple of months from becoming a fully operational national bank built specifically around stablecoins and AI-driven automation rather than retrofitting those capabilities onto legacy infrastructure. CEO Ferdinand Dabitz told Cointelegraph the bank is targeting the correspondent clearing business dominated by global incumbents like Citi and JPMorgan — a market Dabitz describes as "truly broken" because the systems running it were built for human operators, still close on weekends, and rely on decades-old cores that cannot be fundamentally rebuilt for machine-speed programmable money. Augustus's plan is a three-layer stablecoin model: using stablecoins as a funding rail for payments, as a treasury and liquidity tool to release what Dabitz estimates is approximately $3 trillion in trapped idle capital, and as the interface layer for AI agents interacting directly with money.
The bank also plans to compress compliance processes like transaction monitoring and suspicious activity reporting from 20 hours to 20 minutes using AI, with human supervisors overseeing the systems rather than performing each step manually.Augustus has operational history to point to beyond a regulatory approval. The company began as Ivy, a Berlin-founded euro-clearing fintech launched in 2021 that built a transaction banking platform for non-US financial institutions, fintechs, and crypto firms, and already runs euro payments and instant settlement for clients including Kraken. The OCC conditional approval under the GENIUS Act's federal stablecoin framework gives Augustus the regulatory foundation to bring that existing operational model into the US national bank charter structure, with final approval still subject to pre-opening conditions. The incumbents Augustus is targeting are not ignoring the competitive pressure — JPMorgan invests more than $18 billion annually in technology including AI, and Citi reported over $6.1 billion in clearing-related revenue in Q1 alone. Dabitz's argument is that scale and investment budget are less relevant than architectural starting point: large banks can upgrade legacy infrastructure but cannot fundamentally rebuild around AI and tokenized money, while Augustus is designing both into its operating model from the outset.