Digital Wallets Surge, While Regulators Play Catch-Up'

marsbit發佈於 2025-12-19更新於 2025-12-19

文章摘要

Digital wallets are rapidly evolving beyond simple payment tools to encompass lending, investments, crypto assets, digital IDs, and virtual cards, while regulators struggle to keep pace with outdated rules. In the U.S., PayPal (32%), Cash App (25%), and Apple Pay (20%) lead the market, with 77% of adults using at least one major wallet. The CFPB attempted to impose stricter oversight on large non-bank payment providers like Google, Apple, and PayPal through a 2023 proposal, but it was overturned by Congress and President Trump in 2025. Despite this, digital wallets remain subject to a complex web of state and federal regulations, including money transmission licensing, Reg E, UDAAP rules, and FinCEN requirements. Experts warn that inconsistent enforcement and expanding wallet functionalities create compliance challenges, and a loss of consumer trust could trigger renewed regulatory pressure. Key issues include unclear user protections, reliance on banking partners, and potential state-level enforcement if federal oversight weakens.

By: Reporter - Sarah Barnett

Consumers can handle everything from buying coffee to entering concerts with a tap on their phones; meanwhile, wallet apps continue to add new features, such as lending, investing, crypto assets, digital IDs, and virtual cards. Regulators, however, are trapped in old rules, chasing after new applications.

From 'Beam Transfers' to Financial Life on Billions of Phones

Back in 1999—eight years before the first iPhone was released—a Silicon Valley startup called Confinity packaged PayPal.com as a 'killer app,' claiming users could transfer money with just an email address.

Even more bizarrely, it started with an even more peculiar concept: transferring funds via infrared 'beams.' Confinity famously demonstrated at Buck's, a breakfast spot in Woodside, California: beaming $3 million using a Palm Pilot device—an event later recounted by co-founders Max Levchin and Peter Thiel during a Stanford talk.

Fast forward 25 years, the 'email transfer' experiment has evolved into a global digital wallet industry, installed on billions of phones—many users even consider plastic cards as outdated as landlines.

Wallets Can Do Everything Now—That’s the Point

Today's digital wallets are far more than just payment tools. They can also store:

  • Digital driver's licenses and passports

  • Tickets and passes

  • Cryptocurrency

  • Stocks and trading tools

  • Loans and direct deposits

  • Virtual credit/debit cards and reward points

Fintech players like PayPal and Block (parent of Cash App) are continuously adding features to compete for the next wave of users.

Who’s in the Lead in the U.S.

Statista's Q3 survey shows that over the past 12 months, the most used payment services among U.S. users were:

  • PayPal—32%

  • Cash App—25%

  • Apple—20%

  • Google—14%

  • Venmo—14%

  • Samsung—3%

Statista stated that among Q3 respondents, 77% had used at least one of the top three wallets (PayPal, Cash App, Apple); the survey was based on an sample of approximately 60,000 U.S. adults aged 18–64.

The Federal Reserve's annual payments survey also shows rapid growth in mobile payments: consumers used mobile payments an average of 11 times per month last year, compared to just 4 times in 2018. The 18–24 age group completed 45% of all payments via mobile; while households with annual incomes under $25,000 and those 55 and older relied more on cash.

Globally, Juniper Research estimates there are currently about 4.5 billion digital wallet users and predicts this will grow to 6 billion by 2029.

Data Challenge: Big Tech Doesn’t Love Disclosing User Numbers

In the U.S., the precise scale of digital wallet usage is hard to pin down because Apple and Google don't disclose user numbers and often bundle wallet performance into larger business categories.

Block is more transparent: Cash App reported having 58 million active users as of September 2025.

CFPB Wanted to Wield a Bigger 'Regulatory Stick'—Then It Was Taken Away

As digital wallets expanded into more 'bank-like' territories, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) under the Biden administration pushed for more direct oversight.

Lacey Aaker, a former CFPB policy analyst now at Consumer Reports, believes the issue is simple: in the eyes of the average user, digital wallets look like banks but may not have the same protections—and most people don't read the fine print about deposit insurance or which transfers are covered by federal rules.

In November 2023, the CFPB proposed a rule titled **'Defining Larger Participants of a Market for General-Use Digital Consumer Payment Applications.'** The core idea was to bring the largest non-bank payment apps under the CFPB's supervisory examination purview, including routine checks similar to those for banks.

According to the report cited in this article, the CFPB's final rule (later overturned) would have covered 7 non-bank entities processing at least 50 million consumer transactions annually—accounting for 98% of approximately 13.5 billion consumer payment transactions.

The CFPB did not name companies in the rule text. But when Congress moved to overturn the rule, the names emerged: the Congressional Review Act (CRA) resolution mentioned Google, Apple, Samsung, PayPal (and its Venmo), Block (Cash App), and Meta (Facebook).

The rule took effect in January 2025. Tech companies filed lawsuits to block it, and lawmakers moved to repeal it. After Congress passed the relevant resolution, President Trump signed it in May, reversing the CFPB's regulatory approach.

Jonathan Pompan, a Washington lawyer at Venable, described the CFPB's attempt as trying to force old-style consumer credit laws onto modern payments and said Congress 'pulled the plug.'

Regulatory Reality Check: Digital Wallets *Are* Regulated—Just 'Messily'

Even with the repeal of the CFPB's 'Larger Participant' rule, digital wallets remain under a dense web of legal regulations.

According to sources cited in the article, primary regulations typically include:

  • State-level money transmitter licensing (and corresponding enforcement authority)

  • Federal consumer protection requirements related to Electronic Fund Transfer rules (Reg E / EFTA) (specific applicability depends on product and transaction type)

  • Enforcement of UDAP/UDAAP (unfair, deceptive, abusive acts or practices) by the CFPB and FTC, among others

  • Financial crime compliance requirements from the Department of Treasury/ FinCEN, where applicable

  • Regulatory constraints borne by partner banks when wallet funds flow through insured depository institutions

Laura Huntley, Managing Director at FTI Consulting and a former bank regulatory lawyer, stated bluntly: digital wallets have been and will continue to be regulated—just under what she calls a 'dense and messy' framework. A spokesperson for the Financial Technology Association similarly emphasized that wallet businesses are highly regulated through state licenses and banking partnerships.

The CFPB Itself Became Part of the News

The article notes that the CFPB's future is facing questions, including controversies over its funding mechanism, and multiple reports indicating its enforcement work is being transferred to the Department of Justice, accompanied by potential layoffs.

Huntley and others also pointed out that if federal enforcement weakens further, a likely outcome is that State Attorneys General will 'step in' as the new primary market regulators.

Why the U.S. Differs from Markets Like India, Brazil

Statista analyst Raynor de Best suggests the U.S. didn't build its payment system from scratch around digital wallets because Americans have long been deep users of credit/debit cards.

In many emerging markets, mobile payment infrastructure and regulation grew almost simultaneously; whereas the U.S. is trying to 'bolt on' wallet regulation to a complex federal/state dual structure atop a mature card payment system.

Trust Is Everything

Consultants cited in the article stated that compliant wallet platforms have a strong incentive to protect users: once trust is lost, the foundation for platform growth is lost.

Google said it maintains communication with regulators and supports a consistent regulatory framework that both protects consumers and fosters innovation.

Owen Jennings, business lead at Block, stated that Cash App's recent expansions—including digital currency and broader lending—reflect users' current lifestyles but also raise the 'trust threshold': as the app becomes a full financial platform, risks and responsibilities increase accordingly.

Impact on MSBs

For MSBs and payment practitioners, the real risk isn't 'no regulation,' but rather cognitive confusion, regulatory inconsistency, and ever-expanding product functionalities.

  • Disclosures and User Expectations: Users might assume balances are FDIC-insured or dispute handling works like a bank account—but the scope of protection can vary by feature.

  • Reg E Operations: Error resolution and unauthorized transaction handling become complex when wallets mix transfers, cards, stored value, and third-party channels.

  • State Licensing Pressure: 'Patchwork regulation' remains—expanding into new functionalities can trigger new state and federal compliance obligations.

  • Dependence on Partner Banks: If your model relies on bank sponsorship/partnerships, the disappearance of the CFPB rule doesn't mean the compliance burden disappears.

  • Complaint Handling Paths: Even without an added CFPB examination layer, consumer complaints and reputational damage remain highly damaging.

What to Watch Next

  • If federal regulation continues to weaken, whether State Attorney General enforcement accelerates.

  • Which new regulators and rules are brought into the fray by wallet function expansion (credit, crypto assets, investing).

  • Market Trust Incidents: A major consumer harm event could quickly push the political winds back toward 'strong regulation.'

相關問答

QWhat are the top three most used digital wallet services in the US according to the Statista survey?

AAccording to the Statista survey, the top three most used digital wallet services in the US are PayPal (32%), Cash App (25%), and Apple (20%).

QWhat was the core idea of the CFPB's proposed in November 2023, and what was its ultimate fate?

AThe core idea of the CFPB's November 2023 proposal was to bring the largest non-bank payment apps under its supervisory examination authority, subjecting them to regular bank-like examinations. This rule was ultimately reversed after Congress passed a resolution and President Trump signed it in May, effectively blocking the CFPB's regulatory approach.

QHow does the regulatory landscape for digital wallets in the US differ from that in emerging markets like India and Brazil?

AThe US did not build its payment system from the ground up around digital wallets, as it has a long-established and deeply entrenched credit/debit card system. In contrast, many emerging markets developed their mobile payment infrastructure and regulatory frameworks simultaneously, allowing for a more integrated approach.

QWhat are some of the key existing regulations that still apply to digital wallets even after the CFPB's 'larger participant' rule was overturned?

AKey existing regulations include state-level money transmitter licensing, federal consumer protection requirements under the Electronic Fund Transfer Act (Reg E), enforcement against unfair or deceptive practices (UDAP/UDAAP) by the CFPB and FTC, financial crime compliance requirements from FinCEN, and regulatory constraints carried by partner banks that hold user funds.

QWhat potential future developments should payment industry professionals (MSBs) monitor regarding digital wallet regulation?

AProfessionals should monitor potential increased enforcement by state attorneys general if federal oversight weakens, the new regulators and rules that will be introduced as wallets expand into areas like credit and crypto assets, and the possibility of a major consumer trust incident that could rapidly shift the political climate back toward stronger regulation.

你可能也喜歡

Anthropic警告的递归AI,田渊栋新公司刚刚走出了「第一步」

近日,Anthropic发布文章披露,其代码库超过80%由AI撰写,并警告AI“递归自我改进”(即AI自主设计、训练后续版本)可能带来风险,呼吁行业建立暂停机制。与此同时,由田渊栋等人联合创立的新公司Recursive Superintelligence结束了隐身状态,发布了其首项公开技术成果——“迈向自动化AI研究的第一步”。 该系统旨在将传统AI研究中“提出想法-编写代码-运行实验-分析结果”的人工闭环自动化。它能够针对给定目标自动生成实验思路、实现代码、运行验证并从中学习,从而自主推进研究进程,并内置了防止“奖励作弊”的机制。 Recursive在三个差异显著的基准测试中取得了领先结果: 1. **小模型训练优化**:在固定计算预算下,将模型验证损失进一步降低,相当于以更少时间达到同等效果。 2. **训练速度竞速**:在社区持续优化两年的基准上,将训练时间从79.7秒缩短至77.5秒,核心改进包括在注意力层使用FP8计算、为优化器添加退火噪声等。 3. **GPU内核优化**:在英伟达的底层计算内核基准测试中,将整体得分提升至0.754,缩小了与硬件理论极限的差距,而这些优化策略并非来自团队的专业知识,而是由系统自主发现。 Recursive团队阵容强大,已获得巨额融资,其目标是构建能够递归提升自身研发能力的AI系统。这与Anthropic的警告形成了微妙对比:一方正在实践AI加速AI研发的路径,另一方则呼吁为可能到来的“递归自我改进”时刻做好风险管控准备。当前成果虽仅是迈向自动化研究的初步尝试,但标志着一个能够自我增强的AI研发新范式已开始运转。

marsbit41 分鐘前

Anthropic警告的递归AI,田渊栋新公司刚刚走出了「第一步」

marsbit41 分鐘前

黄金抄底指南:盯住利率,别只看战争

**黄金抄底指南:盯住利率,别只看战争** 金价在今年1月底触及历史新高后,开启了持续下跌,并于6月进入技术性熊市。许多投资者困惑:为何战争冲突下黄金不涨反跌? 文章指出,核心原因在于黄金的定价逻辑已从地缘冲突引发的“避险”情绪,切换为对利率的定价。战争推高油价和通胀预期,迫使央行维持紧缩货币政策。黄金作为不生息资产,利率(持有机会成本)越高,其吸引力就越低。5月份一度出现的和平传闻导致金价大跌,恰恰证明了“加息预期”而非“战争与否”才是当前市场的主线。 此外,本轮下跌伴随全市场去杠杆。当投资者需要补充保证金时,会优先抛售流动性好的资产,导致黄金、白银、比特币乃至纳斯达克指数在短期内呈现高度同步下跌,这与资产基本面无关。 对于抄底时机,文章建议关注三个关键信号:1. **加息预期见顶**(如市场对最后一次加息的定价完成);2. **霍尔木兹海峡复航**(缓解通胀压力的上游开关);3. **黄金ETF资金流转为净流入**(表明强制抛售压力减弱)。历史经验(如2008年、2022年)表明,金价见底通常与政策拐点(货币转向)同步,而非与战事结束同步。 文章最后给出个人策略思路(非投资建议):在4000、3700、3500美元附近分三笔试探性布局,总仓位不超过三成,并等待上述信号中至少两个出现后,再考虑追加仓位。核心结论是:在当前的宏观环境下,关注利率动向比单纯关注战争局势,对于黄金投资更为重要。

marsbit47 分鐘前

黄金抄底指南:盯住利率,别只看战争

marsbit47 分鐘前

近期链上回顾:美股冲击下毫无主线的炒

近期链上行情回顾显示,在以太坊主网沉寂后,市场注意力重回Solana,但缺乏明确主线,整体呈现“社区回归与注意力争夺”的拉锯态势。 一方面,注意力争夺成为主流玩法。市场依赖名人喊单、热点事件和快速交易,例如$JOTCHUA靠网络梗和KOL讨论热度暴涨,而同概念代币$WORLDCUP与$PITCH则因缺乏关注表现悬殊。平台pump.fun推出的悬赏任务功能进一步放大了这种趋势,出现了如纹身换赏金等极端案例,虽制造了短期热点,但也引发负面争议,被视作一种博眼球的流量游戏。 另一方面,部分项目展现出社区回归的迹象。这些项目不依赖单一名人喊单,而是通过持续建设、交付产品和凝聚社区共识获得长期发展。例如$neet、$troll、$buttcoin等老牌社区币,凭借鲜明的文化主题和活跃社区保持了相对稳定的生命力。新兴链游项目$KINS(Kintara)是典型代表,它通过扎实的游戏内容更新、经济机制设计和社区活动(如游戏内集成热门币、举办玩家赛事),逐步赢得了玩家信任,吸引了包括知名KOL在内的用户自发参与,建立起良性的网络效应。 文章最后反思,市场在追逐热点的同时,更应思考何为可持续的信任构建,期待更多依靠社区共识和真实价值支撑的项目能引导市场走向更健康的方向。

marsbit47 分鐘前

近期链上回顾:美股冲击下毫无主线的炒

marsbit47 分鐘前

交易

現貨
合約
活动图片