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GENIUS Act and Implementation Rules Released
👉A New Era in the Crypto Ecosystem
1. Introduction: The Regulation Threshold of Digital Finance
The GENIUS Act (Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act), which came into effect in the U.S. in 2025, marked a turning point in terms of regulation in the global cryptocurrency market. By 2026, with the release of detailed draft regulations for the implementation of this law (#GENIUSImplementationRulesDraftReleased), the theoretical framework had moved into the practical implementation phase.
This development fundamentally impacts not only the U.S. market but also the global stablecoin architecture, financial system integration, and regulatory paradigm.
2. What is the GENIUS Act? (Brief Recap)
The GENIUS Act establishes the first comprehensive federal regulatory framework for stablecoins in the U.S.
The main objectives of the law are:
To make the stablecoin market transparent and secure
To protect financial stability
To strengthen consumer rights
To integrate crypto into the traditional financial system
Key requirements:
100% reserve (backed by cash or short-term Treasury assets)
Licensed issuer requirement
Regular auditing and reporting
AML/KYC compliance
3. What does #GENIUSImplementationRulesDraftReleased mean?
This hashtag, which appeared in 2026, refers to the official publication of the draft implementation rules of the GENIUS Act.
In this context, particularly in the US:
The first official regulatory drafts were published by the OCC (Office of the Comptroller of the Currency).
Operational standards for banks and stablecoin issuers were clarified.
Regulation has now moved beyond being just "legal text" and become an enforceable system.
4. 2026 Updates: Critical Changes and New Rules
4.1 Interest/Yield Prohibition
Direct interest payments to stablecoin holders are prohibited.
➡️ This positions stablecoins as payment instruments, moving them from being "savings vehicles" to more practical ones.
4.2 Dual-Layer Supervision Model
Large issuers → Federal supervision
Small issuers → State + local regulation
This model introduces a scale-based regulatory approach.
4.3 1:1 Reserve Requirement (Strengthened)
All stablecoins:
Must be backed by 100% liquid assets
Reserves must be reported regularly
This increases pressure for transparency, especially for projects like Tether.
4.4 Unlicensed Stablecoins Banned
Within the US:
No unlicensed entity can issue stablecoins
Crypto platforms can only list compliant stablecoins
➡️ This could significantly consolidate the market.
4.5 Risk and Operational Management Standards
New rules include:
Capital requirements
Risk management frameworks
Auditing and reporting systems
5. Ecosystem Impacts
5.1 Increased Institutional Adoption
Thanks to regulatory clarity:
Banks
Fintech companies
Large payment systems
can more easily adopt stablecoins.
5.2 Increased Centralization
Due to regulatory costs:
Small projects may exit the market
Large players (Circle, banks, etc.) gain power
5.3 Pressure on DeFi
The Law:
Does not clearly define the responsibility of decentralized structures
However, it indirectly creates access restrictions
➡️ This creates a gray area for DeFi.
5.4 User Privacy vs. Security
AML/KYC requirements:
Increase security
But reduce anonymity
6. Implementation Timeline (2025–2027)
July 2025: The law came into effect
February 2026: The first draft of implementation rules was published
2026–2027: Gradual implementation of regulations
2027: Full implementation (expected)
7. Strategic Analysis: Why is this label important?
The hashtag #GENIUSImplementationRulesDraftReleased essentially means:
“Crypto regulation has moved from theory to practice.”
This development:
Brings stablecoins closer to the banking system
Makes crypto a part of mainstream finance
Has the potential to make regulations a global standard
8. Conclusion
The publication of the GENIUS Act implementation rules is considered one of the most critical milestones in the crypto sector.
This process:
Increases trust and stability
May limit the pace of innovation
May strengthen centralized players
However, in the long term:
➡️ It forms the basis for the crypto market to move out of its “wild west” era
➡️ and evolve into a regulated, institutional, and sustainable structure.
A critical hurdle has been overcome in US stablecoin regulation: Draft rules of implementation under the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act (GENIUS Act) have been released by the two main banking regulators. The FDIC and OCC have opened for public comment Notices of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRMs) outlining the application, licensing, and supervision processes for banks to issue payment stablecoins.
What Happened?
1. FDIC Draft
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) Board of Directors approved a draft rule implementing the application provisions of the GENIUS Act.
The rule allows insured deposit institutions to issue payment stablecoins through an affiliate.
State banks and savings associations under FDIC supervision must apply to the FDIC to have their affiliates approved as “authorized payment stablecoin issuers” in order to conduct this activity.
The draft regulates that applications will be evaluated according to legal factors under Section 5 of the law, finalized within specific timeframes, and an appeals mechanism will be established for rejected applications. The review period is 60 days following its publication in the Federal Register.
2. OCC Draft
The Office of the Currency Conduct Authority (OCC) has proposed a comprehensive regulatory framework for national banks, federal savings associations, and federal branches.
The draft, announced in OCC Bulletin 2026-3, covers “authorized payment stablecoin issuers” (PPSI – approved affiliates of banks), federally qualified issuers, state-qualified issuers, and foreign payment stablecoin issuers (FPSI) under OCC jurisdiction.
The rule aims to establish a licensing, supervision, and enforcement framework. The OCC is soliciting public comment on over 200 questions concerning permitted activities, reserve assets, the licensing process, and capital. The comment period is again 60 days.
Scope of the Drafts
Who is affected: National banks and their subsidiaries, federal savings associations, federal branches, and state banks under FDIC supervision. Also, foreign and state-qualified issuers within the OCC's jurisdiction.
What is regulated: Application and approval process, evaluation criteria, timelines, right to appeal. On the OCC side: Licensing, supervision, reserve asset structure, and capital requirements.
What is excluded: Anti-money laundering (AML) and sanctions compliance obligations are not covered in these drafts; separate regulations are expected for these topics.
What's Next?
Both drafts will enter a 60-day public comment period after being published in the Federal Register. Regulators will evaluate the comments received and shape the final rules. Once the process is complete, a clear legal procedure will be established in the US for the first time for the issuance of payment stablecoins through bank subsidiaries.
This step puts the GENIUS Act's claim to "drive innovation" into action: it opens a predictable application path for banks while regulators link reserve quality, consumer protection, and financial stability to the supervisory framework.
#GENIUSImplementationRulesDraftReleased