Sony Financial Group has taken a meaningful step toward entering the US stablecoin market through a newly planned, regulated banking subsidiary. Sony Bank said it received preliminary approval from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) to form a US national trust bank subsidiary that will be able to issue US dollar-denominated stablecoins.
According to an announcement from Sony Financial Group, the unit—Connectia Trust, National Association—would be fully owned by Sony Bank. Sony Financial Group also said the effort is backed by $40 million in starting capital and is intended to serve as a building block for a longer-term digital asset business foundation.
Connectia Trust, National Association is the specific entity Sony Bank intends to create, with the company describing it as a US national trust bank subsidiary. The OCC preliminary approval is the first major regulatory milestone, but Sony emphasized that it will not conduct any business activities—including stablecoin issuance—until all required approvals and authorizations are secured, including the OCC’s final approval.
Sony Bank also indicated that it plans to launch the subsidiary this month. For investors and market participants, the practical takeaway is that Sony is positioning itself to operate within the US regulatory perimeter, rather than relying on offshore issuance models or non-bank pathways. Still, the timeline remains contingent on final OCC clearance, so readers should treat “this month” as conditional.
The announcement frames the stablecoin initiative as part of Sony’s broader digital asset groundwork. The subsidiary would support the issuance and management of US dollar-denominated stablecoins, backed by Sony Bank and funded with $40 million in initial capital.
The company’s documentation did not, in the provided text, spell out whether Sony plans to launch a proprietary stablecoin or rely on existing stablecoin infrastructure. Cointelegraph reached out to Sony Bank for additional details on the business plan and whether a Sony-issued token would be involved, but did not receive a response by publication time.
That uncertainty matters: the regulatory and operational complexity can differ depending on whether a bank is issuing its own stablecoin versus integrating minting, redemption, and compliance workflows around a third-party token. What is clear is the direction—Sony is seeking an institutional role in US dollar stablecoin issuance through a trust bank structure.
Sony’s move lands in a moment when large financial institutions are increasingly experimenting with stablecoin-based settlement and onboarding—even as US regulatory clarity remains incomplete. Earlier coverage highlighted that Standard Chartered and Circle said they developed a system allowing institutions to mint and redeem USDC through a bank-led onboarding process. In their described model, clients can mint and redeem the US dollar-backed stablecoin via the bank’s platform rather than establishing separate accounts with Circle.
While the Sony plan concerns US dollar-denominated stablecoins more broadly, the parallel is instructive: banks appear willing to pursue stablecoin integration, provided they can align with supervisory expectations and operational controls. The key difference is that Sony is planning to issue and manage stablecoins itself through a regulated entity, which may require more internal infrastructure and governance than distribution-only integration models.
Regulatory momentum in the US is still uneven. The CLARITY Act—one of the best-known efforts aimed at establishing a framework for certain digital asset activities—remains stalled. In the provided reporting, the bill is described as having cleared the Senate Banking Committee in May, but facing pushback from many Democrats and the banking industry.
Critics have raised concerns that the proposal could allow crypto firms to offer yields on stablecoins without subjecting them to the same requirements as traditional financial institutions. That tension has practical implications for how quickly banks and regulated issuers can expand certain revenue models around stablecoins.
Congressional scheduling also adds friction. The bill was set for a House of Representatives hearing on July 17, but Galaxy Digital’s head of research, Alex Thorn, warned that there may not be enough floor time before the Senate’s traditional four-week recess beginning Aug. 8. In a separate update referenced in the text, Galaxy cut its odds of the bill becoming law in 2026 to 50%.
Industry groups remain engaged. More than 200 crypto companies and related organizations urged the Senate to pass the CLARITY Act in a letter shared by Stand With Crypto. Separately, JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon, speaking to Fox Business in May, said banks will continue to “fight” the current version of the CLARITY Act and argued that firms wanting to offer yield-bearing products “should apply for banking charters.”
Taken together, the bank-led push to integrate stablecoins and the legislative gridlock point to a shared reality: institutions may be able to move forward faster where they can operate within existing banking frameworks, even while broader digital asset rules remain contested.
For Sony and the wider market, the next milestone is straightforward but crucial: final OCC approval for Connectia Trust, National Association and confirmation of what Sony intends to issue—whether a proprietary stablecoin or a narrower role in issuance and management. With the CLARITY Act still uncertain, the market will likely look to how banks translate regulatory permission into practical stablecoin products that can scale within US supervision.
This article was originally published as Sony Bank Approved by U.S. Regulator to Launch Stablecoin Issuance on Crypto Breaking News – your trusted source for crypto news, Bitcoin news, and blockchain updates.
