GENIUS Act Update: Meta, Amazon, and Google Might Face Stablecoin Ban

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After the GENIUS Act failed in the Senate last week, legislators added a few bipartisan amendments. These represent significant concessions to the anti-crypto faction, with several important restrictions.

In particular, they ban Big Tech firms from issuing and possibly even holding stablecoins. These amendments would increase stablecoin transparency and enable enforcement actions on noncompliant firms.

Could the GENIUS Act Pass with New Amendments?

Stablecoin regulations are a priority issue for US crypto regulation, and the GENIUS Act is currently the industry’s best hope for passing them.

Although its success seemed likely last week, it failed in the Senate after stiff Democratic opposition and Republican defections. However, rumors claim that the GENIUS Act has new bipartisan amendments that might see it through.

Generally, the GENIUS Act amendments fall along the same axis: addressing the concerns that caused it to fail last week. These include limiting the potential for fraud in a few ways, like making it clear that these products have no consumer protection under the FDIC or federal affiliation.

However, one sticks out in particular, with huge implications:

“Prohibits non-financial publicly traded companies from issuing a stablecoin unless they can meet strict criteria regarding financial risk, consumer data privacy, and fair business practices. This helps prevent companies like Meta, Amazon, Google, and Microsoft from issuing a stablecoin and maintains the separation between banking and commerce,” one version reads.

Reports claim these GENIUS Act amendments come from two Senate sources. However, a different version has also been circulating, and it suggests that Big Tech may be prohibited from holding stablecoins in any manner.

The bill’s language has not been finalized, so either version could be accurate.

Specific Amendments and Their Goals

Skeptical lawmakers have good reason to make this a top regulatory priority, as stablecoins have attracted a lot of news. Putting aside the enormous use case for stablecoins in mundane criminal activities, these GENIUS Act amendments seem tailored to recent specific incidents.

Take, for example, the requirement that stablecoins can’t directly bear US-themed branding. Trump’s USD1 has generated massive controversy, and it has no direct affiliation with the government.

The GENIUS Act amendments aim to ban Big Tech from launching stablecoins, and Meta proposed using them less than a week ago.

GENIUS Act changes
Rumored Changes in the New GENIUS Act Bill.

Most of all, the GENIUS Act amendments are explicitly intended to “maintain the separation between banking and commerce.” Tether has been investing unbelievably vast resources in new US stablecoin opportunities, spending $65 billion on US Treasury bonds in only three months.

Big Tech has ample cash to throw around, so it needs tight guardrails. The other GENIUS Act amendments detail a few such guardrails. For example, they loosen the requirements for enforcement actions against stablecoin issuers.

They also place these actions under the Treasury’s purview, as other regulators like the SEC and CFTC have been gutted.

Additionally, one specifically names Elon Musk as a federal employee with strong conflicts of interest on this matter, but it names others.

Again, these amendments have not been finalized, so it’s not clear if the GENIUS Act will even pass. However, in any event, these proposals represent a massive win for the crypto-skeptical faction in Congress.

The post GENIUS Act Update: Meta, Amazon, and Google Might Face Stablecoin Ban appeared first on BeInCrypto.

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