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#GENIUSImplementationRulesDraftReleased
The U.S. Treasury just dropped its first proposed rulemaking to implement the GENIUS Act, and it is a bigger deal for stablecoins than most people are treating it.
The core question the 87-page proposal is trying to answer: when can a state-level stablecoin regime be considered "substantially similar" to the federal framework? Because under the GENIUS Act, any issuer sitting below $10 billion in outstanding supply gets to choose — federal oversight or state oversight, as long as that state clears the bar.
Treasury is now asking the public to weigh in on exactly where that bar sits. A 60-day comment window is open, and the FDIC just extended its own parallel comment period by 90 days for state nonmember banks and savings associations that want to issue payment stablecoins through subsidiaries.
What this means in plain terms: the U.S. is finally laying the plumbing for a two-track stablecoin system. Big issuers go federal. Smaller ones can stay state-regulated — but only if their state does the work to prove its rules meet federal standards. Any future legislation Congress passes on stablecoins will automatically apply to state-regulated issuers too, unless Congress specifically carves them out.
The broader context matters here. The GENIUS Act itself already established the first federal framework for stablecoins in U.S. history — full reserve backing, AML compliance, regular public disclosures. This rulemaking is the first concrete step toward actually enforcing those standards at scale.
For the stablecoin market, clarity is the main event. Projects sitting in the $1B to $10B range now have a concrete path to understand which regulatory roof they will be living under. That is not a trivial thing — compliance costs, banking relationships, and cross-border usability all hinge on this distinction.
The comment period is the moment for the industry to push back or shape the language. Once those principles get finalized, the two-track architecture gets locked in.