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October 21, 2025Cryptopolitan logoCryptopolitan

Japan’s banks eye crypto comeback as regulator rethinks ban

Japan is on its way to laying the groundwork for how traditional banks interact with ￰0￱ country’s financial watchdog is close to making its decision on whether to permit members of banking groups to launch crypto trading ￰1￱ move could reshape Japan’s tightly controlled digital asset ￰2￱ comes in when the crypto market is dealing with high selling ￰3￱ cumulative market cap dipped by another 2% over the last 24 hours to hover around $3.70 ￰4￱ 24-hour trading volume spiked by 31% to stand at $224 ￰5￱ suggests that investors are moving their funds quickly amid high ￰6￱ may lift crypto ban for banks According to reports, Japan’s Financial Services Agency (FSA) is also considering scrapping its longstanding ban that prevents banks from buying and holding crypto for investment ￰7￱ this gets approved, the move would mark one of Japan’s c rucial policy overhauls since it legalized crypto exchanges in ￰8￱ is expected that this step would bring mainstream banking muscle into a sector long dominated by fintechs and securities ￰9￱ of now, subsidiaries of banking groups are barred from registering as crypto asset service ￰10￱ is done under the Banking ￰11￱ FSA’s proposed revision would allow securities subsidiaries of these groups to handle crypto ￰12￱ will give them a level playing field with rivals under securities companies such as SBI Holdings and Rakuten Securities.

A report mentioned that the regulator is expected to make its case during an upcoming meeting of the Financial Services ￰13￱ with an advisory body to the Prime Minister will center on establishing a framework that lets banks trade and hold crypto assets in the same way they handle stocks or government bonds. However, it will enforce risk management and disclosure ￰14￱ FSA is treading carefully as it plans to require bank-affiliated securities firms to clearly warn retail investors about the volatility of the crypto ￰15￱ added that Bitcoin and other digital assets lack tangible backing, and large holdings could expose banks to balance-sheet stress if prices ￰16￱ is a concern that led the FSA to ban direct investment back in ￰17￱ stuck in turbulence Japan’s stance seems more pragmatic than ￰18￱ institutions like BlackRock and Fidelity are entering the crypto arena through Bitcoin ETFs and Tokyo appears eager to keep pace.

A supportive decision could also strengthen Japan’s position as a regional digital finance ￰19￱ digital assets market remained full of ￰20￱ caught a bid on Tuesday, climbing as gold and silver staged rare double-digit ￰21￱ price surged past $113K just to dive below the $109K ￰22￱ is trading at an average price of $108,773 at the press ￰23￱ saw its steepest drop in years as it fell more than 5% to $4,130, while silver plunged nearly 8%. The selloff unwound months of gains driven by central bank easing, US-China trade tension, and ￰24￱ sudden reversal seems to have sent traders back into ￰25￱ futures open interest has jumped to over $32 billion from $28 billion since the brutal Oct. 10 wipeout that erased $20 billion in leveraged ￰26￱ a premium crypto trading community free for 30 days - normally $100/mo.

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