U.S. stablecoins are moving toward a new regulatory phase following the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)’s signing off on a notice of proposed rulemaking associated with GENIUS Act.
This proposal lays out a specific prudential framework for FDIC-supervised institutions and how payment stablecoins will operate under federal regulatory purview. The move is part of a growing trend to incorporate digital assets into the traditional financial system while ensuring regulatory protections.
The FDIC’s proposal is aimed mainly at entities that it supervises, such as subsidiaries of insured state nonmember banks and state savings associations. These institutions need regulatory approval to issue payment stablecoins through subsidiaries.
The framework provides clear operational commitments, especially around reserve management and redemption obligations. Issuers must also carry enough backing assets and be able to pay users redeeming stablecoins in a timely manner, instilling confidence that they will remain stable and liquid.

Furthermore, the rule sets forth how insured depository institutions are able to provide custodial and storage services for payment stablecoins. The FDIC’s goal in clarifying these roles is to help ensure that banks working with digital asset infrastructure operate under the currently defined regulatory framework.
This comes in light of increased optimism from crypto and banking leaders around potential legislative clarity, particularly following a CLARITY Act discussion and updated provisions addressing stablecoin yield mechanisms.
Central to the proposal is a proposed overhaul of how reserves backing stablecoins are treated. When it comes to these reserves, the FDIC does also cover pass-through deposit insurance, providing users an added layer of protection.
It also confirms that tokenized deposits meeting the definition of a “deposit” under the Federal Deposit Insurance Act will be treated as traditional deposits. Such alignment helps in acting as a bridge between digital and traditional financial instruments, offering regulatory certainty for both institutions and users.

The proposal also highlights AML compliance. Entities authorized to issue stablecoins must show that they have established strong anti-money laundering and anti-terrorist financing programs. No Industry Overhaul What the Fed and FDIC want isn’t an industry overhaul but ensuring that innovation doesn’t mean financial security gets stamped to death.
However, some aspects remain unresolved. It is worth noting that the FDIC has not put in place a minimum capital requirement for stablecoin issuers. Instead, it has sought public feedback about whether such requirements should be made in future rulemaking. This allows regulators to get industry feedback, while still maintaining flexibility in the early days of such a framework. The comment period will be open for 60 days after publication in the Federal Register.
This proposal represents the FDIC’s second significant movement under the GENIUS Act, and follows a December 2025 notice outlining application procedures for institutions that sought to issue stablecoins.
The Act mandates that the FDIC, Department of the Treasury and other regulators must apply prudential standards throughout entire stablecoin ecosystem. Ongoing legislative conversations—especially regarding the stablecoin yield provisions—indicate an evolving framework that foreshadows a stronger, safer future for U.S. stablecoins in the financial system.

