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Chimera readability score 63 out of 100, Academic reading level.

Kraken's focus is on Lithuania as the jurisdiction to secure the license, according to a person familiar with the plans.
- Kraken would be following the same path as Revolut, which holds a specialized European banking license issued by the Bank of Lithuania in 2018.
- Kraken’s plan is to acquire licenses over the next 10 years, either through acquisitions or by starting from scratch in each region, said CEO Arjun Sethi at a recent conference.
Kraken, the cryptocurrency exchange planning to go public in the U.S., is pursuing a full banking license in Europe, with a focus on Lithuania as the jurisdiction to secure it, according to a person familiar with the plans.
If the firm gets the license, Kraken would be the only crypto exchange to have such a designation. It will also tread the same regulatory path as fintech major Revolut, which holds a specialized European banking license issued in 2018 and regulated by the Bank of Lithuania. This allowed Revolut to offer full current accounts, consumer lending, and stock trading across the European Economic Area (EEA).
Kraken declined to comment on the plans. A spokesman for the Bank of Lithuania said the licensing process of financial market participants is confidential.
Other fintech firms holding a banking or specialized bank license in Lithuania include Mano Bank, PayRay, European Merchant Bank (EMBank), AB Fjord Bank, and Saldo Bank.
The move to gain full banking status in Europe is part of a broader effort by Payward, Kraken’s parent company, to obtain additional licenses globally.
In March 2026, Kraken Financial became the first digital asset bank to gain access to the Federal Reserve’s payment infrastructure, making it the first crypto firm to operate on the same rails as traditional financial institutions. In May, Payward announced it secured a VARA authorization in the UAE.
In a recent talk at Money 2020 Europe, Kraken CEO Arjun Sethi mentioned the need for banking licenses, saying “the plan for the next 10 years is to get all of these licenses, either through buying an existing business, or going de novo in each region and starting from scratch.”
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Stablecoin market cap fell to $312B in June, its largest monthly drop since TerraUSD, while tokenized equity volumes surged 145% to a record $3.86B.
Stablecoin market cap fell to $312B in June, its largest monthly drop since TerraUSD, while tokenized equity volumes surged 145% to a record $3.86B.
Why it matters:
Stablecoin market cap fell to $312B in June, its largest monthly drop since TerraUSD, while tokenized equity volumes surged 145% to a record $3.86B.

Sentinel — Human

Confidence

The text appears to be a factual report on regulatory ambitions, but the abrupt inclusion of unrelated market data suggests potential post-processing or aggregation errors.

Signals Detected
low severity: Slightly uneven flow; mix of direct reporting and somewhat repetitive framing.
low severity: Relatively coherent, focusing on a single narrative thread (Kraken banking ambition), but the inclusion of unrelated numerical data at the end disrupts flow.
low severity: Direct attribution to CEO and Bank of Lithuania spokesman; use of specific examples (Revolut, Mano Bank) suggests research grounding.
medium severity: The shift from business reporting about Kraken's plans to unrelated market statistics without clear connective tissue introduces potential stitching.
Human Indicators
Specific, verifiable details regarding the Bank of Lithuania's role and references to named fintech competitors suggest research-based reporting.
The presence of direct quotes from a CEO and official sources lends an air of primary sourcing.