Floating Button
Home News US Economy

Fed’s Bowman says bank regulators working on stablecoin rules

Katanga Johnson / Bloomberg
Katanga Johnson / Bloomberg • 2 min read
Fed’s Bowman says bank regulators working on stablecoin rules
Federal Reserve's Bowman plans new stablecoin rules, aiming at healthy competition between Wall Street and fintechs.
Font Resizer
Share to Whatsapp
Share to Facebook
Share to LinkedIn
Scroll to top
Follow us on Facebook and join our Telegram channel for the latest updates.

(Dec 2) : The Federal Reserve’s top bank cop plans to tell House lawmakers Tuesday that she will work to establish new rules for banks and stablecoins, as regulators seek to ensure healthy competition between Wall Street, fintechs and crypto firms.

“As a regulator, it is my role to encourage innovation in a responsible manner, and we must continuously improve our ability to supervise the risks to safety and soundness that innovation presents,” Bowman said in prepared remarks for a House Financial Services Committee hearing.

She added that new technologies can create a more efficient banking sector that expands access to credit while also leveling the playing field with fintech and digital asset companies.

Bowman also said she will work with other agencies to develop capital and diversification regulations for stablecoin issuers as required by the Genius Act, which requires those issuers to formally register and hold dollar-for-dollar reserves. She underscored the agencies will provide clarity on digital assets and regulatory feedback on proposed new use cases.

Bowman’s remarks come amid a clash between banks and crypto firms over the future of digital-asset regulation, including a fight for access to bank charters. For crypto firms, these charters could provide a multitude of benefits, including a stronger degree of legitimacy.

Traditional lenders warn, however, that the result could be an uneven playing field or a hollowing out of the charter system, where firms can operate with the legitimacy of a bank license but without the full responsibilities that have historically come with it.

See also: Trump says he has made his choice to lead the Federal Reserve

Bank capital

Bowman’s testimony also highlighted her efforts to finalize several bank capital measures, including a long-awaited measure known as Basel III Endgame.

“My approach is to address the calibration of the new framework from the bottom up, rather than reverse engineer changes to achieve pre-determined or preconceived approaches to capital requirements,” Bowman said.

See also: Black Friday sales rise, signalling US consumers’ resilience

Bloomberg News previously reported that the Federal Reserve has shown other US regulators the outlines of a revised Basel III plan that would dramatically relax a Biden-era capital proposal for Wall Street’s largest lenders.

Bowman also said the Fed is working to refine the surcharge for big banks in coordination with broader capital framework efforts.

Uploaded by Isabelle Francis

×
The Edge Singapore
Download The Edge Singapore App
Google playApple store play
Keep updated
Follow our social media
© 2025 The Edge Publishing Pte Ltd. All rights reserved.