Augustus CEO Ferdinand Dabitz says traditional clearing banks are structurally incapable of fully adapting to the rise of AI-driven finance and programmable money systems.
Summary
Augustus has received conditional approval from the OCC to establish a full-service U.S. national bank focused on AI-powered payments and stablecoin infrastructure.
CEO Ferdinand Dabitz argues that legacy clearing banks may modernize certain systems but cannot completely rebuild their outdated core infrastructure.
The move comes as major financial players like JPMorgan Chase and Circle continue expanding tokenized liquidity and stablecoin payment solutions.
The remarks followed conditional approval from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency allowing Augustus to move forward with plans for Augustus Bank, N.A., a proposed full-service national bank in the United States.
The bank has not officially launched yet. Before operations begin, Augustus must still satisfy several pre-opening regulatory conditions and secure a final banking license, including authorization to provide U.S. dollar clearing services on its platform.
Stablecoins and AI at the center of Augustus’ strategy
Augustus plans to build its banking infrastructure around AI-based payments, programmable settlement systems, and stablecoin transactions. According to the company, the platform is designed to support machine agents, institutional users, and programmable dollar flows operating across digital financial networks.
When asked whether Augustus could coexist with traditional clearing banks, Ferdinand Dabitz reportedly responded with “replacing them.” He described the current correspondent banking system as inefficient and outdated, criticizing limited operating hours, legacy infrastructure, and slow settlement processes.
The company also intends to integrate AI into compliance operations, transaction monitoring, case management, and broader back-office functions. Dabitz claimed certain manual workflows could potentially be reduced from “20 hours to 20 minutes,” while still remaining under human supervision.
Regulatory and operational concerns remain
Despite the ambitious vision, AI-led banking models continue to face scrutiny around operational risk, compliance reliability, and potential failures involving automated systems. Dabitz stated that Augustus plans to collaborate closely with regulators and industry leaders to ensure proper safeguards remain in place as AI systems become more deeply integrated into banking infrastructure.
Stablecoin competition intensifies
The announcement arrives during a period of rapid growth in the stablecoin market. Reports cited by crypto.news showed stablecoin transaction volume reaching approximately $33 trillion, with nearly $11 trillion generated during the fourth quarter alone.
Circle also revealed that USD Coin processed around $21.5 trillion in on-chain transaction volume during Q1, marking a 263% increase year-over-year. Regulatory clarity in both the United States and Europe has further accelerated stablecoin adoption through clearer rules for issuers.
Meanwhile, JPMorgan Chase continues expanding its own tokenized liquidity initiatives. This week, the bank’s asset management division launched a second tokenized money market fund on Ethereum, partly aimed at supporting stablecoin issuers under the proposed GENIUS Act.
The fund allows qualified U.S. investors to hold tokenized balances on a public blockchain and subscribe or redeem using cash or stablecoins through a third-party provider — highlighting that the market Augustus hopes to disrupt is already attracting substantial interest from major global banks.



