US Treasury’s first GENIUS rule now redraws who controls stablecoins at scale

US Treasury’s first GENIUS rule now redraws who controls stablecoins at scale


Treasury’s first proposed GENIUS rule landed on April 1 as a notice of proposed rulemaking.

The text inside it builds the operational architecture for US stablecoin governance, addressing which institutions may issue payment stablecoins, under what conditions, and at what scale before federal oversight becomes mandatory.

Why this matters: This shifts stablecoins from a fragmented regulatory patchwork toward a nationally coordinated system. For users, it affects how safely dollars can be redeemed and moved. For issuers, it defines whether they can scale independently or must transition into a federal regime as they grow.

By defining when a state licensing regime qualifies as “substantially similar” to the federal framework, Treasury is now defining those terms.

The stablecoin market already holds roughly $316 billion, with USDT accounting for about 58% of the supply, per DeFiLlama.

Retail-sized volume for USDC, USDT, and PYUSD grew from $500 million to $69.8 billion between 2019 and 2025. FSOC’s 2025 annual report described the GENIUS framework as a federal prudential system designed to onshore stablecoin innovation, protect holders in the event of insolvency, and support the US dollar’s international role.

Treasury’s NPRM now shows how that prudential vision operates on the ground.

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The hidden fight over who governs

The Treasury chairs the interagency review committee that certifies state stablecoin regimes, which includes leadership from the Fed and the FDIC.

That committee’s judgment rests on the “substantially similar” test, and Treasury’s proposal defines that test to include the GENIUS Act itself, as well as the implementing regulations and interpretations issued by federal agencies over time.

Treasury says that substantial similarity would be hard to administer, and state and federal standards could “starkly deviate.”

As OCC, Treasury, the Fed, FinCEN, and OFAC add implementing rules, the standard Washington uses to measure states shifts with them. State regimes approved today must track a benchmark that Washington keeps building.

Treasury organizes the rule around two categories. The first, called uniform, covers the parts that establish trust in the instrument itself: reserve assets, redemption, monthly reserve publication, limits on rehypothecation, accountant examinations, BSA/sanctions compliance, lawful-order capability, and core activity limits.

State implementation of each uniform requirement must be consistent with the federal framework “in all substantive respects,” with no material deviations in definitions or scope. For BSA and sanctions specifically, states must cross-reference federal rules directly, with no room for state-drafted substitutes.

The second category allows calibration around some capital, liquidity, reserve diversification, risk management, applications, licensing, and certain redemption mechanics. Treasury still constrains that room, and state choices in the flexible bucket must produce outcomes “at least as stringent and protective” as the federal framework.

For example, a state may allow additional reserve assets only if the OCC has already approved them as similarly liquid federal government-issued assets. That is federal pre-clearance administered through state paperwork.

CategoryRequirement areaTreasury standardState discretionWhy it matters
UniformReserve assetsMust align with the federal framework in all substantive respectsNo material deviationDefines trust in the stablecoin itself
UniformRedemptionMust track the federal baseline closelyNo narrower state substituteProtects holders’ ability to redeem
UniformMonthly reserve publicationMust match federal expectationsVery limited room to varySupports transparency and market confidence
UniformLimits on rehypothecationMust conform to the federal frameworkNo meaningful carve-outPrevents riskier use of backing assets
UniformAccountant examinationsMust be consistent with federal requirementsLittle to no variationStandardizes verification of reserves
UniformBSA / AML / sanctionsStates must cross-reference federal rules directlyNo state-drafted alternativeKeeps compliance under national control
UniformLawful-order capabilityMust track federal expectationsMinimal discretionPreserves enforcement and legal access
UniformCore activity limitsMust align with the federal frameworkNo material divergenceKeeps issuers inside a nationally defined model
Flexible / calibratedCapitalOutcomes must be at least as stringent and protective as the federal frameworkSome calibration allowedLets states tune prudential standards without weakening them
Flexible / calibratedLiquidityMust be at least as protective as the federal baselineSome calibration allowedGives limited room for state tailoring
Flexible / calibratedReserve diversificationMay vary, but only within outcomes at least as protective as the federal frameworkNarrow flexibilityStates can adjust, but not create a looser reserve regime
Flexible / calibratedRisk managementState framework can differ in formMust still meet protective federal-equivalent outcomesAllows administrative variation, not a different philosophy
Flexible / calibratedApplications / licensingState administration is allowedCannot create a genuinely different regimeKeeps the state lane administrative, not alternative
Flexible / calibratedCertain redemption mechanicsSome room to calibrateMust remain at least as protective as the federal systemStates can adjust process, not weaken substance
Flexible / calibratedAdditional reserve assetsAllowed only if the OCC has already approved comparable assetsFederal pre-clearance still governsShows state flexibility is still bounded by Washington

The $10 billion ceiling and what it produces

The GENIUS Act caps the state option at issuers with no more than $10 billion in consolidated outstanding payment stablecoins.

Treasury adds that state transition rules cannot impede a move to federal oversight once an issuer crosses that line, and issuers in a state that fails certification must either stop issuing payment stablecoins or move into the federal licensing framework.

The $10 billion ceiling is the structural tell, since the state lane functions as an entry point for smaller issuers. At scale, the federal framework becomes the only durable home.

Citi’s updated 2026 forecast puts its base-case estimate for the 2030 stablecoin market at $1.9 trillion. Standard Chartered projected the market could reach $2 trillion by the end of 2028.

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A market at that scale runs on uniform reserve, redemption, and compliance standards and rewards issuers capable of absorbing national-style regulatory overhead.

Visa’s concentration data already reflects the current destination: as of October 2025, more than 97% of the stablecoin supply had converged on USDT and USDC. Treasury’s design standardizes the conditions that large, compliant issuers are already built to meet.

Standard Chartered estimated stablecoins could pull roughly $500 billion in deposits out of US banks by the end of 2028.

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Scale markerAmountWhat it representsRegulatory implicationWhy it matters
State-lane ceiling$10 billionMaximum consolidated outstanding payment stablecoins for an issuer to remain in the state optionAbove this line, the issuer must transition to federal oversight or stop issuing new payment stablecoinsShows the state path is a limited entry lane, not the durable home for large issuers
Current stablecoin market~$316 billionApproximate current total stablecoin market sizeThe market is already far larger than the state-lane thresholdSuggests Treasury is designing rules for a systemically meaningful market, not a niche one
Citi base case (2030)$1.9 trillionCiti’s updated 2026 base-case estimate for the stablecoin market by 2030A market at this scale would likely rely on uniform national standards rather than fragmented state variationReinforces the article’s argument that scale points toward federalization
Standard Chartered forecast (end-2028)$2 trillionStandard Chartered’s projection for stablecoin market size by the end of 2028Implies that if growth continues, large issuers will almost inevitably end up in the federal frameworkSupports the view that the state lane functions more like a launch ramp than a long-term alternative
Bank deposit migration estimate~$500 billionStandard Chartered estimate of deposits stablecoins could pull from U.S. banks by end-2028Stablecoin issuance becomes a question of dollar-system governance, not just crypto regulationHelps mainstream readers see this as a financial-architecture story, not a niche policy update