Shh! Here's How Cannabis Companies Are Banking Legally on the Down Low (2024)

For cannabis companies in need of bank accounts, the news out of Colorado hasn’t been good. In a court hearing this week, a federal judge balked at the notion of forcing federal bankers to license a credit union catering to the cannabis industry.

“I would be forcing the reserve bank to give a master license to a credit union that serves illegal businesses,” U.S. District Court Judge R. Brooke Jackson said at the hearing.

At stake in the court battle is whether the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City must issue a master account, which is required for lending institutions, to Fourth Corner Credit Union, a startup created earlier this year to serve state-regulated cannabis businesses. Cannabis is still illegal under U.S. law, so while Fourth Corner has won Colorado accreditation, it’s hit a wall with the federal reserve bank.

While the judge hasn’t issued a formal ruling, an executive for the credit union vented his frustration after the hearing.

“In 2016, $1.2 billion in cash will be transacted by the cannabis industry in Colorado,” Executive Vice President Mark Goldfogel told the L.A. Times. “That’s all in $20 bills. At some point somebody will die. And then we will be allowed to bank.”

But will the cannabis industry really have to wait for a changing of the guard? Goldfogel’s statement is a beauty of a quote, but it’s not exactly true.

The Fourth Corner case draws a lot of media attention, but dozens of cannabis businesses in Oregon, Colorado and Washington state already have accounts with a established banks and credit unions. These aren’t national brands like Bank of America or Wells Fargo. They’re small, state-chartered institutions with names you’ve probably never heard of: Salal, Maps, Timberland, Numerica.

It’s the industry’s quiet little secret — only it’s not exactly a secret. A few financial institutions are open about their cannabis clientele. Salal Credit Union in Seattle has been serving the cannabis sector since mid-2014.

“After talking about it at great length with our board of directors, we decided that this would be a fit,” Senior Vice President Sheryl Kirchmeier said in an interview this year. “We saw it in part as a public safety issue” for their local community, she said.

Bankers at Salem, Ore.-based Maps Credit Union, which has been doing business with medical dispensaries for more than a year and now works with state-licensed recreational businesses, were also motivated by public safety concerns. “The thought of some guy walking out of his business at night, and going to an environment where there might be lots of people, with $25,000 in cash in his backpack to buy money orders just doesn’t sit right,” Vice President Shane Saunders told the Salem Statesman-Journal.

No Colorado bank or credit union has publicly acknowledged opening cannabis accounts. But a few accounts are open. Talk off-the-record with some of the bigger players in the state’s cannabis industry, and they’ll acknowledge that they’ve managed to obtain banking services — but they almost never give up the name of their banker. Those who have accounts don’t want to lose them by exposing the bank to unwanted attention or criticism.

Data is limited, but it tends to back up the chatter. The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), the Treasury Department bureau that fights money laundering, reports that 266 depository institutions nationwide currently maintain accounts with marijuana-related businesses, known in banking jargon as MRBs. In a recent survey of 400 respondents in the cannabis industry, Marijuana Business Daily reported that 40 percent had bank accounts.

Make no mistake: Banking is still an enormous headache for MRBs. And it’s technically illegal, federally speaking. But a lot of people are finding workarounds.

How are They Doing It?

As with everything in the cannabis industry, it depends on the state. A handful of Washington and Oregon banks are open about their business with MRBs. But those accounts, usually very basic merchant accounts, are expensive and cumbersome. In Colorado it’s very hush-hush — and it’s still expensive and cumbersome.

Washington pushed ahead of Colorado in the banking realm by being proactive with smaller banks and credit unions. Three years ago the state’s Department of Financial Institutions (DFI), which regulates banks and credit unions, took extraordinary measures to find a path to banking legalization.

DFI director Scott Jarvis spent more than a year working with federal regulators to make legal cannabis banking happen. His agency now posts specific guidelines and documents to help businesses and bankers make their way through the thicket of regulations to bank legally.

Colorado’s counterpart agency has no such guidance. Officials there thought the better way to go would be to have the state encourage the formation of marijuana banking co-ops. To that end, the Colorado Department of Regulatory Agencies posts information about starting cannabis-focused credit unions.

Which, of course, is how Fourth Corner Credit Union ended up in federal court this week.

But wait: Banking MRBs is still federally illegal, right? Yes and no. Here’s how it works.

The big scary law is the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA), a 45-year-old federal statute that outlaws money laundering. FinCEN is the main federal agency enforcing the act. If you’re a bank that wants to accept cash from a business selling a federally illegal substance, you’ve got to get FinCEN’s approval.

FinCEN has given that approval. Sort of. It’s tricky.

In February 2014, the Justice Department and FinCEN issued concurrent guidance documents (you can find them here and here) that created a way for banks and credit unions to bank MRBs without technically running afoul of the Bank Secrecy Act.

But the documents are only guidance; they’re not laws. They don’t legalize money laundering. Rather, they give financial institutions some assurance that FinCEN won’t come after them for handling cannabis-related accounts provided they follow a stringent set of rules.

FinCEN said, essentially, that it will allow banks and credit unions to handle state-legal cannabis cash as long as the banks report it to the agency and conduct extraordinary initial and ongoing due diligence on those clients.

Credit unions like Salal must file quarterly Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs) on their cannabis clients with FinCEN. That sounds bad, but it’s actually good. An SAR filed under the category “marijuana limited” means the client is operating a cannabis-related business that adheres to federal enforcement priorities as outlined in the Justice Department’s 2013 Cole memo. If the credit union discovers activity that may violate those priorities, it’s reported as a “marijuana priority” case. If the credit union closes out an account, it’s reported as a “marijuana termination.”

In a way, the FinCEN guidance turns banks into another set of eyes watching to make sure cannabis businesses follow the Cole memo priorities.

All that vetting and reporting is labor-intensive, which makes these accounts expensive for the banks and their clients. Charges for a basic MRB account can run from $400 to $1,000 per month. So even if a bank or credit union is willing to open an account, a merchant might flinch at the price. Toni Savage Fox, owner of Denver’s 3D Cannabis Center, isn’t working with a bank “and it’s mostly by choice,” she told Leafly. “I won’t pay $1,000 a month for someone to store my money. It’s not worth it for me.”

Washington state is working with the FinCEN guidance, mainly because Scott Jarvis, the state’s head banking regulator, continues to put effort into making it work. When federal bank examiners looked as though they might obstruct cannabis accounts, for example, Jarvis and his agency intervened.

“We had a couple instances early on where an examiner maybe came in from out of the region and was unfamiliar with the issues,” Jarvis told Leafly. “We followed up with them and took care of the problem. And our folks,” he said of his office’s examiners, “are all pretty schooled up.”

Colorado, by contrast, has taken a “Congress must change it” stance. The state’s financial regulators have told banks and credit unions only that they must abide by the FinCEN guidelines and recent Justice Department memos. Beyond that, banks are on their own.

Don Childears, CEO of the Colorado Bankers Association, has lamented that the FinCEN guidance is too weak to offer banks the assurance they need to open cannabis accounts. “We believe it literally takes ‘an Act of Congress’ to attract banks to this business,” he advised in a letter to association members.

Such an act may finally stand a chance in both the House and Senate in 2016. (See various attempts that stalled this past year, here and here.) Until then, banking for cannabis businesses will continue to be a drag. But don’t believe the hype about cash-only being the only option. Accounts exist for those who are willing to find them — and pay.

Shh! Here's How Cannabis Companies Are Banking Legally on the Down Low (2)

Shh! Here's How Cannabis Companies Are Banking Legally on the Down Low (2024)

FAQs

Why can't cannabis companies use banks? ›

Though marijuana is now legal in some form in most U.S. states, many banks won't do business with cannabis companies because the drug remains illegal at the federal level. Major credit-card networks such as Visa and Mastercard say they don't process marijuana-related transactions for the same reason.

What is the point of banking cannabis? ›

Point of Banking allows your cannabis business to accept bank cards without a traditional merchant account through an easy-to-use terminal, or cashless ATM.

Why are cannabis companies down? ›

The falling price of the marijuana flower has squeezed companies and pulled stock prices down in the process. Comparing Q3 numbers in 2022 to a year prior, the price of a gram of marijuana fell 13% from $10.83 to $9.43—the largest price decrease ever across a 12-month period.

What is the US cannabis Safe Banking Act? ›

The SAFER Banking Act, passed by the Senate Banking Committee with bipartisan support, aims to allow state-legal cannabis businesses access to traditional financial services, reducing the risk for financial institutions, lenders, insurers, and others serving the industry despite federal restrictions on cannabis.

What banks are cannabis friendly in the US? ›

Bank Michigan is a full-service cannabis-friendly bank, so you can focus on your business, and we can focus on the banking.

What is the Bank Secrecy Act for cannabis? ›

The Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) requires certain financial institutions to have policies and procedures in place both to ensure that their clients are not engaging in unlawful behavior, such as selling marijuana, and to aid law enforcement by reporting potentially illegal or otherwise suspicious activities.

Does Chase do cannabis banking? ›

Though marijuana is now legal in some form in most U.S. states, many banks such as JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America and Wells Fargo continue to say they don't bank with marijuana companies because it is against federal law.

What is a cashless ATM? ›

What Is a Cashless ATM? Cashless ATMs are payment terminals that allow customers to make purchases using a debit card like they would if they were using an ATM to withdraw cash. These terminals are also referred to as point-of-banking technology or solution.

How do cannabis seed banks work? ›

Seeds in the seedbank do not all germinate in one flush, but over a longer period of time. Seed dormancy allows viable weed seed to survive tillage or herbicide application and then germinate later when conditions are safe.

Why are cannabis companies not profitable? ›

“The cannabis industry is under economic distress, primarily due to the confluence of heavy federal taxes, lack of access to financial services and heavy state and federal regulation,” Whitney Economics Beau Whitney said in a press release.

Is there any hope for cannabis stocks? ›

The market opportunities are enormous, especially as more U.S. states legalize cannabis. Investing in these stocks is a high-risk but potentially high-reward proposition.

Who is the largest cannabis company? ›

1. Tilray (TLRY)
  • Market cap: $1.55 billion.
  • Headquarters: Nanaimo, British Columbia.
  • Founded: 2013.
  • Cannabis products: Medical.
Jul 12, 2024

Can US banks lend to cannabis companies? ›

Many ordinary businesses pursue loans from banks. This often does not work for a cannabis business, since the industry is illegal under federal law. Banks must comply with federal regulations, which make the process of lending to an illegal business risky and complicated.

What is cannabis banking? ›

California legalized recreational marijuana in 2016, opening a booming industry. The Cannabis Banking Bill (SAFER Banking Act) aims to provide legal protections and access to financial services for state-legal cannabis businesses.

Who regulates cannabis in the US? ›

FDA's Cannabis Product Committee (CPC) develops and implements cross-Agency strategy and policy for the regulation of cannabis products.

Why is the cannabis industry cash only? ›

Federal prohibition prevents most banks and credit unions from working with CRBs. It is because banks that deal with federally illegal businesses risk losing their federal deposit insurance. As a result, CRBs are forced to operate primarily in cash.

Can cannabis businesses use credit cards? ›

All the major payment card networks deem cannabis purchases and sales to be illegal transactions in the US region, and typically, customers cannot purchase cannabis using their network-branded credit or debit cards as they would in a grocery store.

Can cannabis companies have 401k? ›

Additionally, the State of California requires cannabis business owners to offer a dependable long-term solution for dispensary retirement benefits to their employees and we can help you meet that requirement effortlessly, whether you decide to go with CalSavers or our 401k plan.

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