The U.S. Treasury is extending US Treasury crypto threat intelligence access to eligible U.S. digital asset firms, giving crypto operators the same actionable cyber alerts it already shares with traditional financial institutions. The shift brings more of the sector into the federal threat-sharing perimeter as hacks keep security central to policy.
TLDR Keypoints
- Eligible U.S. crypto firms and industry groups can receive the same actionable cybersecurity information Treasury already shares with traditional financial institutions.
- The move appears to implement a White House recommendation to expand access to Treasury’s Automated Threat Information Feed, or ATIF.
- Treasury has not yet explained eligibility, onboarding, or feed mechanics for crypto participants.
On April 9, 2026, the Treasury Department’s Office of Cybersecurity and Critical Infrastructure Protection said it had launched a cybersecurity information-sharing initiative for the digital asset industry. Treasury said eligible U.S. digital asset firms and industry organizations can receive, at no cost, timely and actionable cybersecurity information designed to help them identify, prevent, and respond to threats.
What the Treasury initiative appears to launch
In plain language, bank-grade threat intelligence means crypto firms are being offered the same actionable cyber information Treasury already sends to traditional U.S. financial institutions. That is the core change in the Treasury announcement.
The July 2025 White House digital-assets report said OCCIP’s information sharing was still centered on traditional financial institutions but was exploring expansion to digital asset firms. The same report explicitly recommended giving U.S. regulated digital asset firms access to Treasury’s Automated Threat Information Feed, making the initiative look like implementation of an earlier policy recommendation.
Why this matters for crypto security and policy
Security impact
Recorded Future News reported that more than $3.4 billion was stolen from cryptocurrency firms last year, which is the clearest data point for why Treasury is widening the threat-sharing circle. Against that backdrop, the same information channel already used by banks could narrow the response-speed gap between traditional finance and crypto infrastructure.
That need for structured sharing also matches security researcher @samczsun, who said useful threat intelligence often stays trapped in private chats instead of reaching firms quickly.
Regulatory signal
The sector was not starting from zero before Treasury stepped in. Security Alliance said in April 2024 that SEAL 911 had already recovered more than $50 million from cyber attacks, and that its crypto-native ISAC borrowed key parts of the FS-ISAC framework used across finance.
That $50 million recovery figure suggests Treasury is formalizing a need the market had already identified.
What crypto companies should watch next
The unanswered questions are practical ones: which firms count as eligible participants, whether access is limited to U.S.-regulated entities, how onboarding works, and whether the ATIF-linked information will arrive as machine-readable indicators, analyst bulletins, or both. Treasury’s public release did not spell out those mechanics.
Coinlive has also tracked adjacent risk themes in its quantum-computing exposure review, a market update on Bitcoin’s dip toward $71K, and a comparison of XRP and ADA after a post-war rally.
What matters next is whether follow-up Treasury guidance turns the April 9, 2026 announcement into a usable operational feed. The July 2025 White House recommendation was specific about ATIF access, but the rollout was not specific on scope or onboarding.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.








