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What does the GENIUS Act mean for stablecoins?
Author: Beam Source: medium Translation: Shan Ouba, Golden Finance
This briefing is based on the enacted “GENIUS Act” (Public Law 119-27), related White House fact sheets, the House-passed “CLEAR Act” (H.R. 3633 EH), relevant Congressional Research Service reports, the Senate legislative advisor's draft “2025 Responsible Financial Innovation Act” (EHF 25866 4MH), and the Senate decentralized finance proposal report.
Following the previous legal briefing on the “EU Artificial Intelligence Act” and its contractual implications, we now focus on another significant regulatory development – new regulations from the United States. The recently enacted “GENIUS Act” establishes a comprehensive federal regulatory framework for stablecoins for the first time, setting the tone for the regulation of digital assets in the world’s largest financial market.
Although the regulatory disputes surrounding the broader digital asset market continue, the GENIUS Act has clarified the core parameters for stablecoin regulation.
If you issue, list, custody, trade, or use stablecoins within the United States or for U.S. clients, here are the key points you need to know.
GENIUS Act: New Rules for Stablecoins
licensing requirements
Soon after, only companies holding a federal license will be able to provide stablecoin services to U.S. customers. This aligns with the regulatory logic that only licensed banks can accept deposits, with the core goal being to ensure that stablecoin issuers are financially sound and subject to appropriate regulation. After July 18, 2028, any exchange, custodian, or other digital asset intermediary (including custodial wallet providers) offering services to Americans may only list or facilitate trades of stablecoins issued by licensed issuers under the GENIUS Act.
This means that mainstream platforms like Coinbase and Kraken need to delist all unlicensed stablecoins in their U.S. versions.
The impact on foreign issuers of ###
If foreign companies want to serve American customers, they must meet the following conditions:
If foreign companies violate the above rules, they will be prohibited from accessing U.S. trading platforms and may face hefty fines. If some widely used stablecoin issuers do not obtain a license under the GENIUS Act, their market circulation may be affected.
Stablecoin Issuer Compliance Checklist
Interest and Returns: Key Restrictions
Another important provision is that the GENIUS Act explicitly prohibits issuers from paying interest on stablecoin deposits. This ban aims to prevent deposit-like products that could undermine the stability of the banking market.
However, the bill did not specify regulations for cryptocurrency service providers such as exchanges, custodians, and lending platforms. This means that, before subsequent rules are issued, service providers may still launch interest-bearing products. In fact, before regulatory clarity, centralized platforms may still attempt to design yield products.
In contrast, the EU's Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation has a broader regulatory scope. Like the GENIUS Act, this regulation prohibits issuers from paying interest, but it also regulates intermediaries that distribute or use these tokens. According to its fifth chapter, crypto asset service providers offering lending, staking, or other yield products must hold licenses, disclose risks, and comply with specific conduct rules. In other words, the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation covers the entire yield chain from issuers to platforms, whereas the GENIUS Act currently only regulates the issuance level.
Market Regulation: Still to be Clarified
The regulatory path for the broader cryptocurrency market, aside from stablecoins, remains unclear. Currently, there are three competing proposals:
The three proposals aim to apply the existing U.S. securities and commodities regulatory framework to digital assets, but there are significant differences regarding decentralized testing standards, DeFi exemption policies, and the division of powers among the SEC, CFTC, and the Treasury.
Follow-up Progress
timeline
The majority of the rules of the “GENIUS Act” will take effect on January 18, 2027, or 120 days after the federal banking regulators release the final implementation rules, whichever comes first. Exchanges serving U.S. customers must delist unlicensed stablecoins by July 18, 2028.
Currently, the legislative disputes related to market structure have not been resolved. Due to significant differences between the Democrats and Republicans, the Senate committee has paused the advancement of compromise proposals, and the final legislative timeline remains unclear.
government coordination
The Ministry of Finance will continue to take the lead in sanctions and anti-money laundering matters, collaborating with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, and other agencies. Under the framework of the GENIUS Act, regulators can freeze non-compliant foreign stablecoin assets or prohibit their trading.
Global Influence
These rules apply to all entities serving U.S. customers, even if they are foreign companies. Global businesses need to assess whether they have the capacity to operate in compliance or whether they should exit the U.S. market. In practice, this could trigger a round of industry consolidation: only a few well-capitalized, fully licensed issuers may remain active in the U.S. market, and other products, including some popular offshore stablecoins, may be delisted by mainstream exchanges or gradually exit circulation.
The impact of ### on decentralized finance and decentralized stablecoins
Although the “GENIUS Act” primarily targets centralized issuers and intermediaries, its impact will extend to the decentralized ecosystem. Purely on-chain or algorithmic stablecoins (which have no legal entity to apply for a “GENIUS Act” license or hold fiat currency reserves) may be effectively excluded from the U.S. market. Due to the lack of registered issuers, these tokens may be deemed non-compliant, resulting in the loss of liquidity on centralized exchanges and decentralized finance platforms. At the same time, the Senate proposal plans to extend registration and customer identification obligations to decentralized frontends serving U.S. users, increasing the pressure on decentralized exchanges to implement regional restrictions or delist unlicensed stablecoins. In the long term, these measures may push the industry toward a regulated stablecoin model, making it more difficult for unlicensed or experimental designs to access U.S.-related markets and liquidity.
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