On Oct 22, 2025 Senator Cynthia Lummis urged the CFPB to finalize an open banking rule to protect consumer account connectivity for crypto platforms and ensure data portability.
In a letter to Acting CFPB Director Russ Vought, dated Oct 22, 2024, Senator Cynthia Lummis urged the agency to move from proposal to final rulemaking.
She wrote stakeholders need clarity so exchanges and payment apps can reliably connect customer bank accounts. Lummis warned banks have “weaponized” account access and asked the CFPB to act “as soon as possible.” Reuters
Proponents say open banking APIs would standardise data formats and authentication, lowering integration friction for fiat-to-crypto conversions.
Implementation typically leans on OAuth-style flows and REST APIs, though technical standards will depend on the CFPB’s final text. Precise mandates and timelines remain subject to the agency’s rulemaking and stakeholder comments.
Consumer financial data sharing means consumers can authorise third parties to access their banking data for services such as payments, budgeting and crypto deposits.
Advocates say this boosts competition and innovation; critics point to fraud and liability risks tied to third-party access. For background, see our open banking explainer and coverage of fiat-to-crypto conversions.
The rule was finalised on Oct 22, 2024 and immediately drew legal challenge from the Bank Policy Institute and the Kentucky Bankers Association; a federal judge paused related litigation in July under Section 1033 of the Dodd‑Frank Act to allow CFPB reconsideration.
Industry coalitions, including the Blockchain Association, have urged the agency to confirm that Americans own their financial data. See CFPB materials for the agency’s framing of the proposal at consumerfinance.gov.
The CFPB must balance technical API expectations with privacy and operational risk before issuing a final rule. Markets and crypto platforms will watch for compliance deadlines, supervisory guidance and potential further litigation.
In brief, finalisation would set durable expectations for consumer financial data sharing and could materially ease bank-to-exchange connectivity for crypto firms, but precise timelines and legal contours remain uncertain.