In July 2025, President Trump signed the GENIUS Act into law, establishing federal oversight for stablecoins in the United States. This legislation targets a specific segment of the cryptocurrency ecosystem amid growing concerns over financial risks. The act aims to integrate stablecoins into existing banking frameworks while addressing vulnerabilities exposed by past crypto failures.
The cryptocurrency landscape began in 2008 with the publication of the Bitcoin White Paper by the pseudonymous Satoshi Nakamoto. This introduced blockchain technology, a digital ledger enabling secure transactions without central intermediaries like banks. Bitcoin, the first cryptocurrency, relied on cryptographic verification to facilitate direct value transfers among participants.
Over time, blockchain expanded beyond Bitcoin to support platforms like Ethereum for smart contracts, non-fungible tokens (NFTs), and even real estate registries. As of April 2024, Bitcoin's market capitalization surpassed $1.4 trillion, representing about 0.3% of the global money supply. Stablecoins, pegged to assets such as the U.S. dollar or gold, held a value of around $250 billion earlier in 2025. Unlike volatile cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, stablecoins maintain steady prices, functioning more like digital cash for transactions and decentralized finance activities such as lending.
The sector's growth has been marred by incidents highlighting regulatory gaps. In United States v. Faiella, courts addressed cryptocurrency's use in money laundering. Hackers stole 850,000 bitcoins from the Mt. Gox exchange in Japan, valued at $460 million then. More recently, the TerraUSD stablecoin's collapse wiped out nearly $60 billion in value. These events underscored risks in an unregulated space mirroring traditional finance's scale.
The GENIUS (Guaranteeing National Infrastructure in U.S. Stablecoins) Act, signed in July 2025, responds to these challenges by focusing on stablecoin issuers. Key provisions, effective January 2027, include licensing limited to insured depository institutions or approved state-chartered entities under Office of the Comptroller of the Currency supervision. Issuers must hold 1:1 reserves in low-risk assets like physical currency or U.S. Treasury bills, with regular public attestations and audits.
Additional measures incorporate stablecoin issuers into the Bank Secrecy Act for anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing, requiring customer identification, recordkeeping, and suspicious activity reports. Issuers cannot pay interest or offer yields on holdings to treat them as payment tools, not investments. Holders gain redemption rights and priority claims in insolvency cases. The act clarifies that stablecoins are neither securities nor commodities.
This law marks Congress's initial effort to align stablecoins with traditional financial regulations, though it leaves broader crypto elements unregulated.