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FedNow wants to do what crypto has sought to solve: real-time payments

The U.S. central bank now has a real-time payments service.

Why it matters: FedNow wants to do what crypto has endeavored to do — speed up payments and make settlements available 24/7, 365 days a year.

Zoom in: “I don’t believe that crypto developments had any bearing on the Fed’s decision to create FedNow,” The Cato Institute’s George Selgin, a long-standing critic of FedNow, tells Axios.

FedNow still needs to scale. And if it does, its direct competitor is RTP, or Real-Time Payments, a private-sector system launched in 2017 from The Clearing House (TCH), intended for federally insured institutions.

The big picture: But inspired by or not, competition is the point.

FedNow aims to be more widely available by opening its payments system to any depository institution eligible for accounts with Federal Reserve banks.

Between the lines: “What the Fed did, in making a European fintech a 1st participant in FedNow — while the Fed is still blocking American fintechs that hold eligible bank charters — is un-American,” Caitlin Long, CEO of Custodia Bank, said in a tweet last week.

What they’re saying: “Adyen’s historical investments into North America have put us in an exciting position today,” Davi Strazza, president of Adyen North America, said in a statement mid-July.

Zoom out: The Fed has now jumped into the game with real-time payments, an area even the White House acknowledged as a demand crypto helped reveal.

What others are saying: “Another turn in the evolution of U.S. payments,” is how payments startup founder Zareef Hamid likened it.

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