May 02, 2025
11 11 11 AM
Latest Post
The SEC Can Learn From the IRS in Making Regulation Simpler for Crypto CoinDesk Recap: Movement’s Very Bad Week Franklin Templeton Backs Bitcoin DeFi Push, Citing ‘New Utility’ for Investors Cambodian Huione Group Received $98B in Crypto Leading to U.S. Crackdown: Elliptic Kevin O’Leary: ‘Crypto Will Be the 12th Sector of the Economy’ Strategy’s $84B Bitcoin Expansion Plan Backed by Wall Street Analysts CoinDesk 20 Performance Update: SUI Drops 5.9% as Index Trades Lower Tether’s U.S.-Focussed Stablecoin Could Launch Later This Year, CEO Paolo Ardoino Says U.S. Added Stronger Than Expected 177K Jobs in April Bitcoin Traders Brace for ‘Sell in May and Go Away’ as Seasonality Favours Bears

U.S. Senate Moves Toward Action on Stablecoin Bill

The U.S. Senate may soon vote on legislation that would establish U.S. regulations for the issuers of stablecoins, also marking the first time the chamber has considered a major crypto bill.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, a South Dakota Republican, started the ball rolling to fast-track the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins (GENIUS) Act, which is the Senate’s version of two similar bills rolling through both chambers of Congress. The House of Representatives is expected to follow closely behind on its own voting. Thune’s move to expedite the bill is meant to limit delays and floor action in order to get it done more quickly. It’s so far unclear precisely when the Senate vote will happen, but an earlier vote on the effort in the Senate Banking Committee had approved it with a wide bipartisan majority of 18-6. The House Financial Services Committee also advanced its similar bill in April.

“I look forward to passing the GENIUS Act in short order to keep digital asset innovation in America, protect customers, and make sure foreign companies are playing by the same rules,” said Senator Bill Hagerty, the Tennessee Republican who authored the bill, in a statement. It’s also backed by Senator Tim Scott, the chairman of the Senate Banking Committee.

President Donald Trump’s self-described crypto sherpa, Bo Hines, the executive director of the Presidential Council of Advisers for Digital Assets, told CoinDesk earlier this week that the two bills are as much as 90% similar and that members of both chambers are seeking to work out the differences.

Hagerty said he would introduce an updated version of the bill earlier Thursday.

This post was originally published on this site