Fintech & Banking Daily

GENIUS Act Implementation: Regulators, Tokenized Deposits & the Stablecoin Rulebook

4 min · 8 jun 2026
aflevering GENIUS Act Implementation: Regulators, Tokenized Deposits & the Stablecoin Rulebook artwork

Beschrijving

(00:00:00) GENIUS Act Implementation: Regulators, Tokenized Deposits & the Stablecoin Rulebook (00:00:44) NCUA Dollar Dominance Argument (00:01:23) JPMorgan Tokenized Deposit Network (00:02:12) Deregulation Divide in Congress (00:02:47) SVB Review and Middle East Funding (00:03:37) Key Watchpoints Ahead The GENIUS Act is now law, but the implementation battle is only beginning. This episode unpacks the House Financial Services Committee hearing where Federal Reserve, OCC, FDIC, and NCUA officials defended their timelines for finalising payment stablecoin rules — timelines that still stretch months ahead, leaving issuers in regulatory limbo and giving traditional banks room to move first. NCUA Chairman Kyle Hauptman reframed the stablecoin debate entirely, arguing that dollar-backed stablecoins — over 80% of which circulate outside the US — are a geopolitical tool for reinforcing global dollar demand. That shift in regulatory rationale, from containment to deployment, has significant implications for how final rules take shape. Meanwhile, JPMorgan Chase is backing a shared tokenised deposit network with major US lenders, a deliberate move to keep payment rails inside the regulated banking system before Circle, Tether, and crypto-native competitors consolidate the space. The distinction between tokenised deposits and stablecoins — deposit insurance, bank oversight, regulatory perimeter — is central to understanding who wins this infrastructure race. On Capitol Hill, Ranking Member Maxine Waters pressed regulators on the administration's deregulatory posture, with the Basel III capital requirements debate still unresolved. The Federal Reserve's SVB supervisory review continues amid concerns that key former officials are declining to participate. Also covered: a strong early-June funding window in the Middle East, with UAE logistics firm CargoX raising $250 million and AI and recycling-tech startups closing rounds across the Gulf and Egypt. Key watchpoints: OCC rule finalisation, the tokenised deposit network launch, and any legislative movement on Basel III before year-end. This episode includes AI-generated content.

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30 afleveringen

aflevering GENIUS Act Implementation: Regulators, Tokenized Deposits & the Stablecoin Rulebook artwork

GENIUS Act Implementation: Regulators, Tokenized Deposits & the Stablecoin Rulebook

(00:00:00) GENIUS Act Implementation: Regulators, Tokenized Deposits & the Stablecoin Rulebook (00:00:44) NCUA Dollar Dominance Argument (00:01:23) JPMorgan Tokenized Deposit Network (00:02:12) Deregulation Divide in Congress (00:02:47) SVB Review and Middle East Funding (00:03:37) Key Watchpoints Ahead The GENIUS Act is now law, but the implementation battle is only beginning. This episode unpacks the House Financial Services Committee hearing where Federal Reserve, OCC, FDIC, and NCUA officials defended their timelines for finalising payment stablecoin rules — timelines that still stretch months ahead, leaving issuers in regulatory limbo and giving traditional banks room to move first. NCUA Chairman Kyle Hauptman reframed the stablecoin debate entirely, arguing that dollar-backed stablecoins — over 80% of which circulate outside the US — are a geopolitical tool for reinforcing global dollar demand. That shift in regulatory rationale, from containment to deployment, has significant implications for how final rules take shape. Meanwhile, JPMorgan Chase is backing a shared tokenised deposit network with major US lenders, a deliberate move to keep payment rails inside the regulated banking system before Circle, Tether, and crypto-native competitors consolidate the space. The distinction between tokenised deposits and stablecoins — deposit insurance, bank oversight, regulatory perimeter — is central to understanding who wins this infrastructure race. On Capitol Hill, Ranking Member Maxine Waters pressed regulators on the administration's deregulatory posture, with the Basel III capital requirements debate still unresolved. The Federal Reserve's SVB supervisory review continues amid concerns that key former officials are declining to participate. Also covered: a strong early-June funding window in the Middle East, with UAE logistics firm CargoX raising $250 million and AI and recycling-tech startups closing rounds across the Gulf and Egypt. Key watchpoints: OCC rule finalisation, the tokenised deposit network launch, and any legislative movement on Basel III before year-end. This episode includes AI-generated content.

8 jun 20264 min
aflevering JPMorgan, Citi & BofA Go On-Chain: TDN, Stablecoins & the Digital Dollar Play artwork

JPMorgan, Citi & BofA Go On-Chain: TDN, Stablecoins & the Digital Dollar Play

(00:00:00) JPMorgan, Citi & BofA Go On-Chain: TDN, Stablecoins & the Digital Dollar Play (00:00:48) Stablecoin Squeeze Play (00:01:28) CBDC Preemption Strategy (00:02:10) TDN Infrastructure and Deposit Defense (00:03:08) India-Nepal UPI Cross-Border Launch JPMorgan, Citi, and Bank of America have moved from blockchain experimentation to production infrastructure — and the implications for fintech, stablecoins, and digital dollar policy are immediate. In this episode of Fintech & Banking Daily, we break down the launch of the Tokenized Deposit Network through The Clearing House: what it does, why it closes the weekend settlement gap that gave stablecoins their strongest enterprise use case, and why Circle and Tether now face a structural challenge rather than a feature-level one. The TDN isn't just a payments product — it's a positioning move. By connecting JPMorgan's Kinexys and Citi's Token Services into a shared interoperability layer, the biggest US banks are pulling institutional clients back inside the regulated perimeter while the CLARITY Act and stablecoin legislation are still moving through Congress. We explain the deliberate framing of TDN as private digital dollar infrastructure — and why that framing is designed to undercut the policy case for a Fed-issued retail CBDC. We also cover the deposit defense logic: how TDN responds to CLARITY Act provisions that could allow yield-bearing stablecoins, and what it means for bank deposit bases if programmable, blockchain-native alternatives go mainstream inside regulated rails. Finally, we flag the India-Nepal UPI cross-border remittance launch — a live extension of India's digital payments infrastructure into South Asia, and a marker for where real-time cross-border payments are heading. Key watchpoints: enterprise client migration to TDN, stablecoin issuer strategic response, and whether Congress treats this network as a reason to accelerate or abandon digital dollar legislation. This episode includes AI-generated content.

Gisteren4 min
aflevering India Safe Harbour, MiCA's 17% Crisis & US Banks' Token Network artwork

India Safe Harbour, MiCA's 17% Crisis & US Banks' Token Network

(00:00:00) India Safe Harbour, MiCA's 17% Crisis & US Banks' Token Network (00:01:03) RBI Adoption Risk (00:01:41) EU MiCA Compliance Crisis (00:02:34) US Banks Tokenized Deposit Network (00:03:20) Institutional Crypto Integration India's fintech sector is facing a structural reckoning after the arrest of Fino Payments Bank's CEO over GST evasion tied to merchant activity. The Payments Council of India is now drafting a safe harbour framework to shield RBI-regulated entities from retrospective liability for merchant misconduct — but the critical question is whether the RBI and Indian ministries will adopt it, or whether enforcement continues in regulatory grey zones. In Europe, the MiCA transitional window closes July 1, and the numbers are stark: only around 210 of roughly 1,200 crypto firms operating under legacy national registrations have converted to full authorisation — a 17% conversion rate with three weeks remaining. Coinbase, Kraken, Binance, and Crypto.com have already delisted or geofenced Tether's USDT for EU users. Circle's USDC now holds a widening compliance advantage as the only major stablecoin with full MiCA authorisation. Meanwhile, JPMorgan, Bank of America, and Citi have jointly launched a tokenized deposit network through The Clearing House, aiming to offer corporate treasuries programmable settlement without moving deposits outside the traditional banking system. SBI's assumption of control over WIZE's Solana-based treasury and Fasanara Capital's Ferrari-collateralised private credit platform add further texture to the institutional crypto integration trend. This episode tracks three converging pressures — regulatory liability, compliance deadlines, and infrastructure competition — and identifies the specific signals that will determine whether adaptation is keeping pace. This episode includes AI-generated content.

6 jun 20264 min
aflevering GENIUS Act Rules Land: Reserves, Capital & the Stablecoin Power Shift artwork

GENIUS Act Rules Land: Reserves, Capital & the Stablecoin Power Shift

(00:00:00) GENIUS Act Rules Land: Reserves, Capital & the Stablecoin Power Shift (00:00:38) Reserve and Capital Requirements (00:01:33) New PPSI Classification (00:02:15) Primary vs Secondary Market Split (00:02:46) Payment Giants Back Stablecoin Platform (00:03:25) UK Drops Stripe for Adyen The stablecoin rulebook is no longer hypothetical. The FDIC and OCC have formally proposed their GENIUS Act implementing rules, and the architecture is largely locked in. A 100% reserve mandate — backed by U.S. dollars, short-term Treasuries, or Fed repo agreements — eliminates any fractional-reserve ambiguity. Non-bank issuers face a $5 million capital minimum plus 12 months of liquid operating reserves. The comment period closes June 9th. Enforcement begins January 2027. Two structural shifts stand out. First, stablecoin issuers are reclassified as Payment Stablecoin Issuers — a new Bank Secrecy Act category carrying bank-equivalent AML and OFAC obligations, including the technical ability to block, freeze, and burn non-compliant transactions. Second, the framework splits primary and secondary markets: full KYC applies to issuance and redemption, but peer-to-peer transfers get lighter treatment — a workable compromise that leaves a real compliance gap on decentralised rails. Meanwhile, the competitive landscape is moving fast. Stripe, Visa, and Mastercard are jointly backing a new stablecoin infrastructure platform, with Coinbase exploring participation. The card networks have decided stablecoins are a growth surface, not a threat to manage — and their earlier acquisitions of Bridge and BVNK mean they're already structurally positioned ahead of the capital requirements that will disadvantage new entrants. Also covered: the UK government has replaced Stripe with Adyen for GOV.UK Pay, a three-year £25.3 million contract that includes a pay-by-bank option — a quiet but meaningful step away from card-network dependency in public-sector payments. This episode includes AI-generated content.

5 jun 20264 min
aflevering Tiger Brokers Shutdown, FCA Crypto Warning & Nigeria's Lending Crisis artwork

Tiger Brokers Shutdown, FCA Crypto Warning & Nigeria's Lending Crisis

(00:00:00) Tiger Brokers Shutdown, FCA Crypto Warning & Nigeria's Lending Crisis (00:01:13) UK FCA Crypto Sports Warning (00:02:01) X Corp FTC Settlement Petition (00:02:46) NCUA Credit Union Merger Slowdown (00:03:10) Nigeria's Digital Lending Crisis (00:03:40) Key Watchpoints Ahead Regulators across three continents moved aggressively this week, and the pattern is unmistakable: fintech platforms that scaled ahead of their licensing are now paying the price. In China, the CSRC fined UP Fintech — Tiger Brokers' parent — nearly $60 million for operating mainland securities services without authorization. Effective June 12, Tiger Brokers is halting deposits and buy trades for China-based accounts. Futu Securities and Longbridge face the same enforcement logic, each given two-year winddown periods. The door on unregulated cross-border capital access is closing fast, with real disruption ahead for retail investors who relied on these platforms to reach global markets. In the UK, the Financial Conduct Authority has warned Premier League football clubs that crypto sponsorships with unauthorized firms create legal and reputational exposure. The FCA has already contacted specific clubs, signaling that enforcement isn't hypothetical. Sports finance teams now have a new regulatory risk category to price in. In the US, X Corp has petitioned the FTC to terminate its 2022 privacy settlement, arguing the obligations are outdated and anti-competitive for AI development. A public comment window runs until July 2. Also covered: NCUA data showing credit union merger activity cooling in Q1 2026, with fewer distress-driven deals suggesting sector stabilization — and Nigeria's digital lending crisis, where unregulated apps are targeting teenagers with instant credit and aggressive collection tactics while regulators lag dangerously behind. Key watchpoints: further CSRC actions against offshore brokers, FCA proceedings against Premier League clubs, and the FTC's response to the X Corp petition before July 2. This episode includes AI-generated content.

4 jun 20264 min