America’s Okay With Stablecoins as Crypto Industry Applauds GENIUS Act

bitcoinist2025-06-20 tarihinde yayınlandı2025-06-20 tarihinde güncellendi

Özet

It turns out that the gateway to crypto mass adoption isn’t through BTC or memecoins – it’s via stablecoins. Solid....

Trusted Editorial content, reviewed by leading industry experts and seasoned editors. Ad Disclosure

It turns out that the gateway to crypto mass adoption isn’t through BTC or memecoins – it’s via stablecoins. Solid. Dependable. Unexciting. Stablecoins only have one job, but they have to do it well: stay steadfast to the fiat currency they’re pegged against, which is usually the US dollar.

But off-chain, in order to make dollar-pegged tokens possible, there’s a whole lot going on behind the scenes, from custody to compliance and audits to redemptions. Stablecoins are serious business. They’re also big business that’s about to get even bigger now the U.S. Senate has passed the GENIUS Act. The excitement is palpable. It’s also measurable.

Circle Soars Off GENIUS Act

Stablecoins might be tasked with maintaining dollar parity, but the stocks of their issuers have no such restrictions. And since its IPO at the start of June, USDC operator Circle’s stock has been locked into one mode: Up Only. Despite repeated warnings from commentators that the rally won’t last, so far CIRCL stock has refused to drop. At the time of writing it’s trading at $222 a share, having been issued to institutions at $31 a pop less than a month ago.

Coinbase, which is a major partner of Circle and USDC custodian for institutional clients, has also been buoyed by the swell of positive industry sentiment, sending CIRCL up 10% for the month. Despite geopolitical uncertainty due to conflict in the Middle East, the crypto market has held up remarkably well. And it’s hard not to attribute the Senate’s passage of the GENIUS Act to playing a major role in this.

Senate Gets Serious About Stablecoins

The legislation itself is typically dry yet practical stuff that will serve to further legitimize stablecoins while ensuring that their issuers are both regulated and reputable. The GENIUS Act mandates that stablecoin issuers hold full reserves of safe assets such as U.S. dollars or Treasuries to back their tokens. It requires monthly that they submit audits and compliance with anti-money laundering and anti-terrorism financing rules.

There are also consumer protections baked in. For example, in the event of issuer bankruptcy, stablecoin holders gain priority for repayment, safeguarding their investments. Finally, the Act enables banks, fintechs, and other regulated entities to issue stablecoins – but large tech companies are restricted unless they partner with regulated financial institutions.

Summarizing what it means for the crypto industry, Andrei Grachev, Managing Partner of Falcon Finance, said: “GENIUS treats stablecoins as payment tools, not just crypto assets. Pegging them to U.S. Treasuries and enabling fast, low-cost transactions could improve how payments work in the U.S. and reduce pressure on the financial system. At a time when other countries are moving fast, this puts the U.S. in a stronger position to lead with rules that support both innovation and stability.”

While the GENIUS Act promises to mainstream stablecoins, it’s not without flaws it should be noted. The bill’s failure to fully address conflict-of-interest concerns, especially regarding Trump’s ventures, raises questions about its integrity. The restriction on decentralized stablecoins could also stifle innovation by favoring established players. On the flip side, the crypto industry’s argument that regulatory clarity will unlock economic opportunity holds weight, especially for faster payment systems.

What Next?

The GENIUS Act, it should be noted, isn’t a ticket for unchecked token issuance in the U.S. Nor is it an invitation for crypto businesses to relocate to American soil and set up shop under the now crypto-friendly administration. Nevertheless, its passage into law (the Act will next proceed to the House) is a milestone for the crypto industry. It signals that the U.S. is open for crypto business, and that companies willing to play by the rules won’t be penalized.

The Biden administration was notorious for its crackdown on crypto businesses, with the litigious SEC attempting to prosecute domestic companies such as Coinbase and Kraken, having taken a dim view of staking products – despite both firms having done everything in their power to meet compliance requirements. The same administration also leaned on banks to withdraw services to blockchain companies.

Now, the SEC’s days of punitive crypto enforcement look to have faded, providing a pathway for U.S. tech startups to build web3 products without needing to constantly glance over their shoulders and keep an army of lawyers on retainer. In short, it will allow U.S. startups to do what they do best: innovate.

America is okay with stablecoins at last. And the crypto industry is very okay with that.

 

 

Image by Kredite from Pixabay

Editorial Process for bitcoinist is centered on delivering thoroughly researched, accurate, and unbiased content. We uphold strict sourcing standards, and each page undergoes diligent review by our team of top technology experts and seasoned editors. This process ensures the integrity, relevance, and value of our content for our readers.

Bitcoinist is the ultimate news and review site for the crypto currency community!

İlgili Okumalar

Nearly a Hundred Players Rush into Embodied Data: With 4.47 Billion Yuan in Financing in One Year, Who Can Really Make Money by 'Selling Data'?

The domestic embodied AI data industry has attracted nearly 100 players, with 70 focused on data collection and 27 on data infrastructure. In the past year, 15 independent embodied data service providers raised approximately 4.47 billion yuan. Despite this growth, the sector remains early-stage, fragmented, and faces significant challenges. Data collection methods are diverse, categorized into four main routes: teleoperation of real robots, human demonstration without a robot (using motion capture, exoskeletons, etc.), simulation synthesis, and distillation from internet videos. Most companies (43%) adopt hybrid approaches, combining multiple routes, as no single method can meet all training needs. Teleoperation alone is pursued by 31% of players, often by state-owned platforms and robot companies, while newer firms favor asset-light, no-hardware human demonstration. Independent data service providers now form the largest player group (40%), indicating the emergence of a distinct industry segment rather than just a subsidiary function for robot makers. Two-thirds of all players are "embodied-native" startups, while one-third are companies that pivoted from fields like AI data annotation, which are more prevalent in the data infrastructure layer. Current annual industry capacity is estimated at 1.6-1.8 million hours plus 70-80 million data points, with a short-term goal to increase this 15-20 fold within 1-3 years. Data collection factories are spread across 20 provinces in China, concentrated in the Yangtze River Delta, Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei, and Pearl River Delta regions. Financially, the 4.47 billion yuan raised in the past year pales compared to the 43.8 billion yuan raised by the broader embodied intelligence sector in just the first half of 2026, highlighting that data remains a less "sexy" bet for investors. The 15 funded independent providers show clear stratification: a top tier led by a unicorn (Lightwheel Intelligence, 3.1 billion yuan), a middle tier of 11 firms raising tens to hundreds of millions, and an early-stage tier of 3 companies. Sixty-nine investment institutions have participated, but none have made concentrated bets, reflecting uncertainty about viable business models. Over half of these funded companies are less than a year old, most are at pre-A or A rounds, and profitability remains largely unproven. In summary, the embodied data industry has become an independent track creating jobs and local economic activity. However, it is still nascent, with unformed consensus, unsolved problems, and unproven business models. The coming 1-2 years will be a critical validation window to see if companies can build sustainable, profitable businesses purely by "selling data."

marsbit2 saat önce

Nearly a Hundred Players Rush into Embodied Data: With 4.47 Billion Yuan in Financing in One Year, Who Can Really Make Money by 'Selling Data'?

marsbit2 saat önce

Dialogue with Multicoin Partner: The Crypto Market Has Bottomed Out, Favoring Three Cryptocurrencies in This Cycle

In a recent interview, Multicoin Capital managing partner Tushar Jain shared his views on the crypto market. He believes the market has bottomed and is at an inflection point, citing that negative news no longer causes significant price declines and application adoption continues to grow. Jain remains highly bullish on Solana, viewing it as the correct architectural choice for internet capital markets, particularly for spot and tokenized security trading. He is also positive on Hyperliquid, noting its leadership in decentralized derivatives trading. His investment approach focuses on concentrating capital in top convictions rather than equal allocation. A distinct opportunity he highlights is Zcash (ZEC), which he sees as a return to the industry's cypherpunk ethos and a potential top-five asset by market cap. For assets like Zcash without cash flows, his valuation framework is based on relative market cap ranking. Regarding investment strategy, Jain employs a "three-part" entry method to avoid timing pitfalls and emphasizes long-term "active management" over "active trading." He outlines four sources of investment edge: informational, analytical, behavioral/psychological, and structural. On portfolio management, the fund uses Bitcoin as its "cash," selling assets into Bitcoin during market euphoria to reduce beta risk and using Bitcoin to buy dips. Sales occur only if a better opportunity arises, the investment thesis breaks, or valuations become excessively overheated. While respectful of Ethereum's resilience, he questions its unclear scaling roadmap. Finally, Jain reaffirms his commitment to the thesis that blockchains will form the foundational architecture for future capital markets.

marsbit3 saat önce

Dialogue with Multicoin Partner: The Crypto Market Has Bottomed Out, Favoring Three Cryptocurrencies in This Cycle

marsbit3 saat önce

İşlemler

Spot
活动图片