Crypto World
Banks seek to slow down implementation of crypto’s GENIUS Act on stablecoin oversight
The crypto industry is frequently finding bankers involved in its top-priority regulatory efforts, and this time, a coalition of bank trade associations has asked the U.S. Department of the Treasury to extend the window in which the public can weigh in on implementation of last year’s Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins (GENIUS) Act.
In a letter sent this week to the Treasury Department and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., bankers in the U.S. are asking that three different GENIUS Act rule proposals get extended comment periods, at least 60 days after another rule effort (at the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency) is finished. The OCC’s push to implement its rule for policing stablecoin issuers is meaningful to the outcome of other rules being pursued at the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) and the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), plus a related rulemaking at the FDIC.
All the efforts are “directly contingent on the OCC’s final framework,” the bankers contend. The collective efforts, in addition to regulatory proposals that haven’t yet emerged from the Federal Reserve and other agencies, “represent a body of regulatory work of extraordinary scope and complexity.”
The banking organizations, including the American Bankers Association and the Bank Policy Institute, said that their comments “will necessarily be more comprehensive, and therefore more useful to the agencies, if we have sufficient time to evaluate the proposed rules together and to evaluate each against the finalized OCC framework.”
The GENIUS Act is meant to be in place by 2027, though it’s not unusual for federal agencies to grant extensions of comment periods on complex rules. The Treasury Department didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment on the bank industry’s request.
The same bankers are also embroiled in a stablecoin-related debate with the crypto industry that’s so far managed to delay the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act for months, and potentially jeopardize its potential for becoming law this year.
Read More: U.S. Treasury proposes demands that stablecoin firms be set to police bad transactions
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