The U.S. stablecoin market is entering a defining new phase as the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) prepares to publish its first-ever rule for stablecoin issuers under the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act (GENIUS Act).
Acting Chairman Travis Hill is expected to unveil the proposal before the end of December, marking a historic shift from fragmented oversight to a unified federal framework.
This rulemaking is part of a broader regulatory coordination effort between the FDIC, Federal Reserve, and OCC, all required to deliver final rules within one year of the Act’s passage. For the first time, both bank and non-bank firms seeking to issue payment stablecoins will have a clearly defined supervisory path, a long-standing missing piece in U.S. digital asset regulation.
A New Regulatory Era for U.S. Stablecoins
The GENIUS Act, which took effect mid-2025, represents the most comprehensive digital asset law the U.S. has enacted to date. Its goal is to make stablecoins safer, more transparent, and more compatible with the broader financial system, while preventing the risks exposed by previous collapses in the industry.
For policymakers, the new FDIC proposal is the first major step in operationalizing that vision. It will define how stablecoin issuers, particularly state-chartered depository institutions, must operate to meet federal oversight standards established under the law.
The Act also introduces a new regulatory category: Permitted Payment Stablecoin Issuers (PPSIs). These include banks regulated by federal agencies and specific non-bank entities that meet strict qualification criteria.
What the GENIUS Act Requires From Issuers
The framework is built on strict reserve quality and transparency standards designed to prevent the kind of liquidity failures that have historically triggered stablecoin depeggings. Under the Act:
- •All payment stablecoins must be backed 1:1 by U.S. dollars or short-term Treasury bills.
- •Issuers must publish monthly attestations, giving the public a clear view of reserve composition.
- •Stablecoin holders receive priority claims on reserves in a bankruptcy scenario, ensuring users are legally protected.
- •Issuers are prohibited from describing their tokens as FDIC-insured or government-backed, eliminating deceptive marketing practices.
- •No yield or interest can be provided to stablecoin holders – a rule aimed at distinguishing payment tokens from investment products.
The FDIC will supervise state-chartered banks issuing stablecoins, while the OCC will oversee federally qualified non-bank issuers, creating a defined regulatory split.
Why This Matters for the Market
The upcoming proposal is more than a procedural step; it represents a turning point for institutional adoption. Many major financial firms have been waiting for clarity on reserves, custody, supervisory authority, and bankruptcy protections before expanding stablecoin services.
With a clear federal structure now in motion, banks, fintechs, and payment companies will have a regulatory foundation to build on. Analysts expect this to accelerate integration of stablecoins into payment networks, remittance platforms, and bank-issued digital assets.
The Act’s full implementation will occur 120 days after all three primary regulators publish their final rules, setting the stage for stablecoins to operate under a uniform national standard for the first time.

