A new chapter in the crypto regulatory journey—what investors should know about stablecoins
The cryptocurrency market is experiencing a significant shift in its regulatory environment. Governments worldwide are taking a more proactive stance to define, control, and integrate digital assets into existing financial frameworks and protect consumers.
What are Stablecoins?
Stablecoins are digital assets designed to maintain a fixed value, often pegged to the U.S. dollar. They are traded, used in decentralized finance (DeFi), and often used for payments. They were introduced to combine the benefits of cryptocurrencies with the stability of fiat currency but they are not risk-free. Stablecoin risks include reserves, regulatory, counterparty, security, tax, and compliance risks. Market panic (depegging from fiat currency) risk should also be taken into account when investing in stablecoins. Stablecoins like USDT and USDC can move across blockchains and are used in DeFi as collateral, to provide liquidity, and as financial instruments in lending and borrowing platforms.
Stablecoins Latest U.S. Regulation
The United States is pivoting towards clearer and potentially more supportive regulations. The U.S. Senate approved the bipartisan GENIUS Act on June 17, 2025, in a 68–30 vote, aiming to categorize stablecoins as payment systems—not securities. The regulation mandates cash-backed reserves, independent audits, AML (Anti-money Laundering), and KYC (Know Your Customer) compliance.
This regulation aims to increase protections and transparency for stablecoins like USDC, with issuers being held to bank-like standards. The goal of the regulation is to protect consumers and provide financial stability, unlocking potential for broader use of payments and responsible growth. However, it could squeeze smaller coins by creating a more complex and costly environment and increasing compliance costs and potentially impacting innovation capabilities.
Concerns with The GENIUS Act
The GENIUS Act offers a long-awaited regulatory framework for stablecoins, but some critics are pointing out notable drawbacks around insufficient consumer protections, such as insufficient insurance and bankruptcy concerns. There is a potential conflict of interest, possibly enabling government officials to regulate their own cryptocurrencies.
There are concerns with systemic instability since some believe it could destabilize treasury markets or lead to the creation of shadow banking—when crypto firms issue stablecoins backed by private assets but without daily disclosures or enough capital buffers, lacking the safety nets of traditional banks. There are concerns around compliance cost and yield bans, regulatory gray areas, and increased centralization surveillance risk.
The GENIUS Act will impact stablecoins that are deemed risky and those outside the regulatory framework parameters that don't meet the requirements, negatively impacting them due to their inability to comply. The objective is to eliminate unbacked or algorithmically-backed stablecoins operating in the U.S. This could lead to market consolidation, where only well-established institutions can operate. Noteworthy, the GENIUS Act has just passed the Senate in June 2025 and it still needs to be approved by the House of Representatives and potentially signed into law.
Takeaway: There is a global push to regulate cryptocurrency and in the U.S. The GENIUS Act legislation is a significant step towards regulating stablecoins in an effort to enhance consumer protection and maintain crypto market stability. However, it faces criticism due to its potential impact on smaller innovators, lack of guardrails, risk of over-regulation, and unethical concerns. In essence, smaller issuers may not survive the strict financial requirements.

