Articles
Crypto Market Analysis

FDIC moves to regulate stablecoin issuers under the GENIUS Act

User Image

通过 匿名

创建 April 08, 2026|阅读需要 2 分钟
Main Image

FDIC’s proposed rules providing insurance for corporate deposits of stablecoin issuers will not extend to the stablecoin holders, as it would conflict with the GENIUS Act’s text, the FDIC said.

The US Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) has proposed new rules to regulate FDIC-supervised stablecoin issuers in accordance with the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for US Stablecoins (GENIUS) Act, which was signed into law nine months ago.

In a statement on Tuesday, the FDIC said its board of directors voted to issue a proposal that would set reserve, redemption, capital, risk management and custody standards for stablecoin issuers and insured depository institutions under its supervision.

The FDIC insures deposits at more than 4,000 financial institutions and supervises over 2,700 banks and savings associations to maintain stability in the US financial system.

The GENIUS Act granted the FDIC authority to oversee stablecoin activity within the banks and institutions that it supervises when it was signed into law in July, though it is scheduled to take effect on Jan. 18, 2027, if not earlier. 

While reserve deposits backing a payment stablecoin would be insured under the FDIC’s proposed rules, that protection won’t extend to stablecoin holders, the FDIC said.

The FDIC argued that treating stablecoin holders as the insured depositors “seems inconsistent” with the GENIUS Act’s prohibition on payment stablecoins being subject to Federal deposit insurance.

Related: Stablecoins flip automated clearing house volume in February

However, the FDIC said its rules would still provide a more “secure environment” for stablecoin holders by offering them “increased assurance that their payment stablecoins are subject to elevated regulatory and supervisory standards.”

The FDIC invited the public to offer feedback on 144 questions related to how it should regulate stablecoin issuers. Comments will be accepted for the next 60 days.

It marks the FDIC’s second proposal for implementing the GENIUS Act, following a Dec. 19 plan to establish an application procedure for IDIs seeking approval to issue payment stablecoins through subsidiaries.

The Office of the Comptroller is also working to implement the GENIUS Act. The OCC would cover a broader scope of stablecoin activity than the FDIC, as it oversees national bank subsidiaries and certain nonbank issuers.

Magazine: Would Bitcoin really be at $200K if not for Jane Street? Trade Secrets

Source: CoinTelegraph


最近发布的其他文章

OKX expands X-Perps in Europe with Magnificent 7, gold and oil futures
OKX expands X-Perps in Europe with Magnificent 7, gold and oil futures

Crypto Market Analysis

OKX rolls out stock-linked expiry futures for European retail traders, expanding competition with Co...

Humanity says compromised laptop led to $36M bridge attack
Humanity says compromised laptop led to $36M bridge attack

Crypto Market Analysis

Humanity Protocol's Terence Kwok said some multisig keys may have been accidentally backed up to a c...

Bitcoin 'normal' 4-year cycle puts focus on $53K low before 2028 BTC price high
Bitcoin 'normal' 4-year cycle puts focus on $53K low before 2028 BTC price high

Bitcoin

Bitcoin trader said that BTC price was approaching its cycle bottom "window" with the $53,000 cycle ...

MiCA architect says EU should prioritize tokenization over DeFi rules
MiCA architect says EU should prioritize tokenization over DeFi rules

DeFi

One of MiCA's architects said he sees no need to regulate DeFi as the European Commission gathers fe...

Privacy push as StarkWare and Sui move toward compliance-ready confidential transfers
Privacy push as StarkWare and Sui move toward compliance-ready confidential transfers

Crypto Market Analysis

StarkWare and Sui roll out confidential transfer systems as Zama boosts compliance efforts and Zcash...

Blockchain researchers warn HTX sanctions may blur crypto risk signals
Blockchain researchers warn HTX sanctions may blur crypto risk signals

Blockchain

Researchers say broad HTX tainting could freeze legitimate users and make compliance tools less usef...