The American Bankers Association, Bank Policy Institute, Consumer Bankers Association, Financial Services Forum and The Clearing House Association responded late yesterday to a U.S. Department of the Treasury Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on its implementation of the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act (GENIUS) Act. The submission asks Treasury to develop regulations that preserve the benefits of payment stablecoins for their intended use in payments and settlements, without causing undue risks for consumers, other stablecoin holders or users, competition, credit availability, illicit finance, or financial stability.
“The GENIUS Act is a major legislative achievement that, if implemented effectively, can strengthen America’s financial competitiveness,” the associations stated upon filing the letter. “We are confident that Treasury is carefully considering how to craft regulations that mitigate potential risks associated with these instruments while faithfully implementing Congress’s intent that payment stablecoins function as payment instruments. We recognize the complexity of developing these rules and look forward to engaging with Treasury and the federal banking agencies throughout the rulemaking process.”
The associations made several initial recommendations in their letter:
- Implement Congress’s intent to prohibit stablecoins from paying interest or yield. Congress broadly prohibited the payment of interest or yield by stablecoin issuers in GENIUS. That prohibition should be extended to digital asset service providers, such as exchanges and affiliates.
- Prevent regulatory arbitrage. Same activity, same regulation. Treasury should consider federal, state, and foreign payment stablecoin regulatory regimes so that stablecoin issuers are held to the same rules required of any other financial institution engaged in equivalent activities.
- Enforce strict illicit finance safeguards. Combatting illicit finance requires common standards that are strictly enforced. Treasury should hold all entities engaged in the same activities to the same standards, including stablecoin issuers, digital asset services providers, and banks.
- Reaffirm the longstanding separation of banking and commerce. The U.S. has maintained a longstanding policy of separating banking and commercial activities to prevent the emergence of associated risks, including undue concentration of economic power. The GENIUS Act prohibition on payment stablecoin issuance by public or foreign companies not predominantly engaged in financial activities should be implemented in a manner that continues that policy.
- Tighten safeguards to preserve trust and prevent conflicts of interest. Stablecoin issuers should provide clear disclosures, including regarding the reserves backing their stablecoins. They must also uphold the highest standards for custody and safekeeping to protect customers, maintain market integrity, foster confidence, and minimize conflicts of interest.
- Apply consistent consumer protections. Stablecoin issuers and payment stablecoins must be subject to the same robust consumer protections applicable to other institutions and products that similarly facilitate payments and settlement.
- Clarify statutory definitions. Help create common definitions and standards for what constitutes a “payment stablecoin,” “digital asset service provider,” “foreign payment stablecoin issuer,” and other novel terminologies to mitigate the risk of regulatory arbitrage and evasion.
To access a copy of the association’s response, please click here.