THE GENIUS DILEMMA: INNOVATION VERSUS
ANTIFRAUD IN STABLECOIN REGULATION


Seth C. Oranburg*

ABSTRACT

     The 2022 TerraUSD collapse, erasing $50 billion and exposing
unregulated stablecoin risks in a $260 billion market, led Congress to enact
the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation 
---
or U.S. Stablecoins Act o
---

2025 (GENIUS Act). This statute exempts compliant payment stablecoins

---
rom the Securities Act’s “security” de
---
inition, en
---
orces strict reserve
requirements, and creates a tailored private right o
---
 action—shi
---
ting authority

---
rom ex post Rule 10b-5 litigation to ex ante prudential oversight while
maintaining market discipline via calibrated remedies.
     As the 
---
irst doctrinal analysis o
---
 this landmark legislation, this Article
contends GENIUS resolves regulatory 
---
ragmentation, optimizes risk
allocation under uncertainty, and bolsters U.S. global leadership in digital
assets. Yet it reveals latent tensions, including potential jurisdictional
overlaps and diluted anti
---
raud measures, that require rapid rulemaking and
interagency coordination to avert persistent issues. Moreover, GENIUS does
not apply to state-issued stable coins, creating a di
---

---
erent regime 
---
or private
issues and state actirs. In 
---
intech’s dynamic era, GENIUS could solidi
---
y
stablecoins as digital payment pillars, but demands vigilant execution to
balance innovation and stability without repeating past 
---
ailures.
     The Article examines GENIUS’s structure, doctrinal/policy impacts, and
implementation roadmap, because, i
---
 implemented well, it cements
stablecoins’ 
---
uture—else, it risks exacerbating the 
---
ragmentation it targets.


    INTRODUCTION................................................................................. 2
    I. FROM FRAGMENTATION TO FRAMEWORK: THE PRE-GENIUS
REGIME AND THE TRANSITION PHASE ..................................................... 5


* Pro
---
essor o
---
 Law, University o
---
 New Hampshire Franklin Pierce School o
---
 Law; Director,
Program on Organizations, Business, and Markets at NYU’s Classical Liberal Institute; J.D.,
University o
---
 Chicago; B.A., University o
---
 Florida.

                                                   1
2            STANFORD JOURNAL OF BLOCKCHAIN LAW & POLICY                                           [Vol. 9.1


    II. ARCHITECTURE OF PUBLIC LAW 119-27 ................................... 10
    III. ASSESSING GENIUS – DOCTRINAL COHERENCE, RISK
ALLOCATION, AND ENFORCEMENT DYNAMICS ..................................... 14
    IV. GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES – MICA, SINGAPORE’S PSA, AND
GENIUS’S UNIQUE SYNTHESIS ............................................................. 21
    V. IMPLEMENTATION ROADMAP – TURNING GENIUS INTO
REALITY ................................................................................................. 26
    CONCLUSION .................................................................................. 31


INTRODUCTION

     In In the shadow o
---
 the 2022 TerraUSD collapse—a cataclysm that
vaporized $50 billion in value overnight and exposed the perils o
---
 unregulated
digital assets—Congress has 
---
orged a new path 
---
or stablecoins. The Guiding
and Establishing National Innovation 
---
or U.S. Stablecoins Act o
---
 2025
(GENIUS Act), 1 enacted on July 18, 2025, 2 marks a watershed in 
---
ederal

---
inancial regulation. By carving payment stablecoins3 out o
---
 the Securities
Act’s de
---
inition o
---
 “security” 4 while imposing bank-like reserve




1
  SEC v. Terra
---
orm Labs Pte. Ltd., No. 23-cv-1346 (JSR), 2024 WL 2797383, at *5
(S.D.N.Y. Apr. 5, 2024) (detailing the TerraUSD 
---
raud and its market implications);
Chainalysis, 2025 Crypto Crime Mid-Year Report 12–15 (2025),
https://www.chainalysis.com/blog/2025-crypto-crime-mid-year-update/ (estimating $2.17
billion in stablecoin-related the
---
ts in H1 2025 alone); Chainalysis, 2024 Crypto Crime
Trends: Illicit Activity Down as Scamming and Stolen Funds Fall, But Ransomware and
Darknet Markets See Growth (2024), https://www.chainalysis.com/blog/2024-crypto-crime-
report-introduction/ (noting 0.34% illicit activity in 2024 on-chain volume as baseline).
2
  GENIUS Act, 12 U.S.C. §§ 5901-5916 (enacted July 18, 2025); WilmerHale, What the
GENIUS Act Means 
---
or Payment Stablecoin Issuers, Banks, and Custodians (2025),
https://perma.cc/ZUW9-PUHM (con
---
irming enactment date).
3
  A stablecoin is a cryptocurrency designed to hold a steady value, o
---
ten tied to a 
---
iat
currency like the U.S. dollar or supported by asset reserves. Payment stablecoins, a speci
---
ic
type, are built 
---
or transactions and settlements, with issuers required to redeem them at a

---
ixed value, a principle underscored in regulations like the U.S. GENIUS Act o
---
 2025. For
instance, Circle’s USDC (USD Coin) is a widely used dollar-pegged stablecoin, enabling
swi
---
t, cost-e
---

---
ective trans
---
ers in digital wallets or on trading plat
---
orms.
4
  Section 2(a)(1) o
---
 the Securities Act o
---
 1933 broadly de
---
ines a “security” to include
instruments like stocks, bonds, and investment contracts, shaping what 
---
alls under 
---
ederal
regulation. In crypto, this de
---
inition helps determine whether token sales, like certain initial
coin o
---

---
erings (ICOs), are securities, as seen in SEC en
---
orcement actions.
2025]                           THE GENIUS DILEMMA                                           3


requirements5 and a tailored private right o
---
 action,6 the Act seeks to reconcile
innovation with anti
---
raud sa
---
eguards in a market now valued at over $260
billion.7 Yet this legislative bargain raises pro
---
ound questions: Does GENIUS
resolve the doctrinal ambiguities that plagued pre-2025 en
---
orcement, or does
it merely displace them? Can its prudential mandates e
---

---
ectively mitigate
systemic risks without sti
---
ling competition? And will the Act’s private right
o
---
 action prove an adequate substitute 
---
or the robust private en
---
orcement tools
o
---
 Rule 10b-5?8
      Stablecoins, digital assets designed to maintain a stable value relative to

---
iat currencies like the U.S. dollar, have emerged as a cornerstone o
---

decentralized 
---
inance (DeFi) 9 and cross-border payments. 10 Their utility
stems 
---
rom providing liquidity without the volatility o
---
 cryptocurrencies like
Bitcoin, enabling e
---

---
icient transactions in a borderless digital economy. 11
However, the absence o
---
 comprehensive 
---
ederal regulation has led to a
patchwork o
---
 state-level oversight and 
---
ederal en
---
orcement actions, creating
uncertainty 
---
or issuers and users alike.12 The GENIUS Act addresses this void
by establishing a national 
---
ramework, but in doing so, it reallocates authority


5
  Reserve backing entails holding assets like cash or securities to underpin the value o
---
 issued
tokens, ensuring stability and redeemability. Full 100% reserves mean the issuer holds assets
matching or exceeding the value o
---
 all circulating tokens. Paxos, 
---
or example, backs its
Binance USD (BUSD) stablecoin with U.S. Treasuries and cash equivalents, with regular
audits con
---
irming this commitment.
6
  A tailored private right o
---
 action lets individuals sue 
---
or statutory violations with speci
---
ic
limits, like damages caps. Securities laws, 
---
or instance, allow such actions with PSLRA
sa
---
eguards against 
---
rivolous claims.
7
  GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 14(c)–(d); Chainalysis, 2025 Crypto Crime Mid-Year Report
12–15 (2025), https://perma.cc/VEB9-H6N5, at 12 (market valuation as o
---
 July 20, 2025).
8
  17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5 (2025); Blue Chip Stamps v. Manor Drug Stores, 421 U.S. 723
(1975) (limiting private 10b-5 standing); Private Securities Litigation Re
---
orm Act o
---
 1995,
Pub. L. No. No. 104-67, 109 Stat. 737 (codi
---
ied as amended in scattered sections o
---
 15
U.S.C.). Exchange Act Rule 10b-5, under the Securities Exchange Act o
---
 1934, bars

---
raudulent activities in securities transactions, including misstatements or manipulative
practices. It’s o
---
ten used in insider trading cases, such as the prosecution o
---
 Martha Stewart

---
or misleading statements about her stock sales.
9
  DeFi liquidation occurs in decentralized 
---
inance when a borrower’s collateral value drops
below a required threshold, triggering an automated sale to repay the loan and protect lenders.
On the Compound protocol, 
---
or example, i
---
 a user borrows ETH with BTC as collateral and
BTC’s price plummets, the smart contract sells the BTC, o
---
ten at a discount, to settle the
debt.
10
   A dollar-denominated stablecoin is pegged to the U.S. dollar, striving to maintain a
consistent 1:1 value through asset backing or other mechanisms. Tether (USDT), the largest
stablecoin by market cap, serves as a prime example, widely used on crypto exchanges to
shield traders 
---
rom the volatility o
---
 other cryptocurrencies.
11
   Chainalysis, supra note 1, at 12 (highlighting stablecoins’ utility in borderless
transactions).
12
   Hester M. Peirce, Comm’r, U.S. Sec. & Exch. Comm’n, Statement: Getting Back on Base
(Feb.27, 2025), https://www.sec.gov/newsroom/speeches-statements/peirce-statement-
coinbase-022725.
4          STANFORD JOURNAL OF BLOCKCHAIN LAW & POLICY                              [Vol. 9.1



---
rom securities regulators 13 to banking supervisors, potentially weakening
anti
---
raud protections while promoting innovation.14
      This Article dissects the GENIUS Act’s architecture, evaluates its
doctrinal and policy implications, and charts a practical roadmap 
---
or
implementation. It draws on recent empirical data, including Chainalysis
reports estimating $2.17 billion in stablecoin-related the
---
ts in the 
---
irst hal
---
 o
---

2025, to underscore the stakes. 15 By synthesizing insights 
---
rom U.S.
en
---
orcement history, economic theory, and global comparatives, the Article
argues that GENIUS represents a principled but precarious balance. I
---

implemented with vigilance, it could position the U.S. as a leader in digital-
asset regulation; otherwise, it risks repeating past 
---
ailures like the TerraUSD
debacle.16
      The analysis proceeds as 
---
ollows. Part I traces the 
---
ragmented pre-
GENIUS regime and outlines the transitional uncertainties 
---
acing
stakeholders, setting the stage 
---
or understanding the Act’s trans
---
ormative
potential. Part II unpacks the statute’s core provisions, situating them within
a legislative lineage o
---
 crypto-re
---
orm e
---

---
orts and highlighting the trade-o
---

---
s
in design. Part III assesses GENIUS through doctrinal, economic, and
en
---
orcement lenses, weighing its innovations against potential pit
---
alls and
incorporating quantitative models 
---
or risk allocation. Part IV draws
comparative lessons 
---
rom global regimes like the EU’s Markets in Crypto-
Assets Regulation (MiCA) 17 and Singapore’s Payment Services Act, 18
o
---

---
ering validation and cautionary tales. Finally, Part V provides actionable
guidance 
---
or regulators, industry counsel, and litigators navigating the Act’s
rollout, including checklists and timelines to 
---
acilitate compliance.
      Ultimately, this Article contends that GENIUS’s success hinges on more
than statutory text—it demands dynamic implementation in
---
ormed by
empirical monitoring and interagency collaboration. 19 As stablecoins
underpin trillions in cross-border payments, the Act o
---

---
ers a pragmatic path

---
orward: stability without stagnation. Yet the coming years will reveal



13
   The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) en
---
orces securities laws and protects
investors. For example, the SEC reviews IPO 
---
ilings and pursues actions against companies
like Tesla 
---
or misleading statements impacting stock prices.
14
   GENIUS Act, supra note 2 (shi
---
ting oversight 
---
rom SEC to banking regulators).
15
   Chainalysis, supra note 1, at 12-15.
16
   SEC v. Terra
---
orm Labs Pte. Ltd., supra note 1.
17
   The EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA), 
---
ully applicable in 2024, governs
crypto issuers, exchanges, and custody with rules on transparency and stability. Stablecoin
issuers, 
---
or instance, must hold reserves and obtain authorization to operate across EU states.
18
   Singapore’s Payment Services Act (PSA) o
---
 2019 regulates digital payment tokens, with
MAS stablecoin rules (2023) mandating reserve backing and Singapore-based issuance 
---
or
“MAS-regulated stablecoins.” An issuer must hold high-quality assets and gain MAS
approval to meet these standards.
19
   GENIUS Act, supra note 2, §§ 3, 5, 15.
2025]                           THE GENIUS DILEMMA                                               5


whether this congressional wager pays o
---

---
 or requires 
---
urther amendments to
secure the digital dollar’s 
---
uture.20

PART I: FROM FRAGMENTATION TO FRAMEWORK: THE PRE-GENIUS
REGIME AND THE TRANSITION PHASE

      Congress’s enactment o
---
 the Guiding and Establishing National
Innovation 
---
or U.S. Stablecoins Act (“GENIUS” or “Pub. L. 119-27”)21 ends
a decade o
---
 doctrinal 
---
og surrounding dollar-denominated stablecoins. Part I
explains how that 
---
og 
---
ormed, why Congress dissipated it, and what liminal
challenges remain. It begins by tracing the pre-2025 en
---
orcement mosaic,
highlighting the jurisdictional overlaps that sti
---
led innovation. Next, it
identi
---
ies the 
---
inancial shocks and political pressures that propelled a 
---
ederal
statute, including the TerraUSD collapse22 and subsequent mini-runs.23 Then,
it outlines the 
---
irst-order uncertainties now 
---
acing regulators, issuers, and
courts—especially in light o
---
 GENIUS’s amendment to the de
---
inition o
---

security in the Securities Act o
---
 1933. Finally, it presents a practical timeline

---
rom enactment to 
---
ull legal e
---

---
ect, providing stakeholders with a navigational
tool 
---
or the transition.

      I.A Pre-2025 En
---
orcement Patchwork

     For most o
---
 the last decade, no single agency spoke with decisive
authority on stablecoins, leading to a 
---
ragmented regulatory landscape.24 The
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) pursued what one commentator
called a “regulation-by-en
---
orcement”25 strategy, 
---
iling 171 crypto-asset cases
between 2019 and 2024.26 Those 
---
ilings relied on the elastic de
---
inition o
---
 an



20
   WilmerHale, supra note 2 (projecting 
---
uture amendments i
---
 needed).
21
   GENIUS Act, supra note 2.
22
   The collapse o
---
 TerraUSD (UST) in May 2022 was a stark example o
---
 an algorithmic
stablecoin’s 
---
ailure. Issued by Terra
---
orm Labs, UST lost its $1 peg, crashing to near zero
amid rampant sell-o
---

---
s, a ballooning supply o
---
 its paired token LUNA, and eroded investor
trust, leading to over $40 billion in losses. This event exposed the 
---
ragility o
---
 algorithmic
designs, drove Terra
---
orm Labs into bankruptcy, and resulted in 
---
raud charges against its

---
ounder, Do Kwon.
23
   A mini-run describes a rapid, small-scale withdrawal o
---
 
---
unds that strains an institution’s
liquidity, while bank-run dynamics re
---
lect a sel
---
-
---
ueling panic where 
---
ear o
---
 insolvency
sparks mass redemptions, risking collapse. Suppose social media rumors cast doubt on a
stablecoin’s reserves; a mini-run might see 10% o
---
 holders redeem tokens in a day,
potentially escalating into a 
---
ull crisis i
---
 the issuer struggles to meet demands.
24
   Peirce, supra note 12.
25
   ”Regulation-by-en
---
orcement” occurs when agencies like the SEC use lawsuits to shape
industry behavior instead o
---
 clear rules. The SEC’s suits against 
---
irms like Coinbase 
---
or
unregistered operations set precedents through litigation rather than proactive guidance.
26
   Cornerstone Research, SEC Cryptocurrency En
---
orcement: 2024 Update 3 (2025).
6         STANFORD JOURNAL OF BLOCKCHAIN LAW & POLICY                            [Vol. 9.1


investment contract 27 under SEC v. W.J. Howey Co., o
---
ten treating even
payment-oriented tokens as securities based on their 
---
unctional
characteristics. 28 This approach created uncertainty, as issuers could not
predict whether their tokens would be deemed investment contracts subject to
registration and disclosure requirements.
     At the same time, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission
(CFTC) 29 staked out overlapping claims, labeling certain tokens
“commodities” and bringing anti
---
raud actions under the Commodity
Exchange Act.30 FinCEN31 layered on Bank Secrecy Act32 requirements 
---
or
exchanges, mandating anti-money laundering (AML) programs and
suspicious activity reporting. 33 State banking and trust supervisors, most
prominently the New York Department o
---
 Financial Services, 34 imposed
bespoke licensing schemes, 
---
urther complicating compliance 
---
or multi-state
operations.35
     The litigation outcomes were inconsistent, exacerbating the con
---
usion.
SEC v. Ripple Labs36 produced a split decision: XRP sales in primary markets
were securities transactions, but secondary-market trades were not.37 In 2023,
the SEC sued Binance Holdings;38 a 2025 voluntary dismissal clari
---
ied little



27
   The investment-contract test 
---
rom SEC v. W.J. Howey Co. (1946) de
---
ines a security as an
investment in a common enterprise with pro
---
it expectations 
---
rom others’ e
---

---
orts. In 2017, the
SEC applied this to classi
---
y DAO tokens as securities.
28
   SEC v. W.J. Howey Co., 328 U.S. 293 (1946).
29
   The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) regulates 
---
utures, options, and
swaps markets. It oversees Bitcoin 
---
utures on plat
---
orms like the CME and has authority over
certain crypto derivatives.
30
   Commodity Exchange Act, 7 U.S.C. §§ 1–27
---
 (2025); CFTC v. My Big Coin Pay, Inc., 334
F. Supp. 3d 492 (D. Mass. 2018).
31
   The Financial Crimes En
---
orcement Network (FinCEN), a U.S. Treasury bureau, analyzes
transaction data to 
---
ight 
---
inancial crimes. Crypto exchanges, 
---
or instance, must register as
money services businesses and implement AML programs under FinCEN rules.
32
   The Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) o
---
 1970 mandates 
---
inancial institutions to record and report
certain transactions to combat money laundering. Banks, 
---
or instance, 
---
ile Currency
Transaction Reports (CTRs) 
---
or cash deposits over $10,000, which FinCEN analyzes to
investigate suspicious activity.
33
   31 U.S.C. §§ 5311–5336 (2025).
34
   The New York Department o
---
 Financial Services (NYDFS) regulates 
---
inancial institutions,
including crypto 
---
irms via its BitLicense. Gemini, 
---
or example, must comply with NYDFS’s
strict standards to operate in New York.
35
   N.Y. Comp. Codes R. & Regs. tit. 23, § 200 (2025).
36
   The Ripple Labs/XRP litigation began with a 2020 SEC lawsuit alleging unregistered
securities sales. A 2023 ruling 
---
ound institutional XRP sales were securities but
programmatic ones were not, leading to a 2025 settlement with a $125 million 
---
ine, paid in
cash, with both sides dropping appeals by July 2025, clari
---
ying secondary market token sales.
37
   SEC v. Ripple Labs Inc., 682 F. Supp. 3d 308, 328–30 (S.D.N.Y. 2023) (appeal pending).
38
   The Binance en
---
orcement action, a 2023 SEC lawsuit against Binance and Changpeng
Zhao 
---
or unregistered operations and 
---
und commingling, was dismissed in May 2025 amid a
policy shi
---
t, leaving major crypto issues unresolved.
2025]                          THE GENIUS DILEMMA                                          7


about token status 
---
or U.S. users.39 The result was a jurisdictional lottery that
sti
---
led innovation and con
---
used investors, as market participants navigated
con
---
licting signals 
---
rom 
---
ederal and state authorities.40

      I.B Catalysts 
---
or Legislative Action

      Two stress events 
---
inally moved Congress to act, highlighting the
systemic risks posed by unregulated stablecoins. First, the May 2022 collapse
o
---
 TerraUSD erased $50 billion in value, 
---
orcing decentralized-
---
inance
liquidations that rippled through traditional markets.41 Hearings be
---
ore the
Senate Banking Committee drew attention to the absence o
---
 reserve-quality
rules or redemption guarantees, underscoring the need 
---
or 
---
ederal
intervention.42
      Second, a series o
---
 2023–24 mini-runs on state-chartered trust
companies issuing dollar-backed stablecoins exposed gaps in consolidated
supervision.43 Although issuers redeemed at par,44 
---
ederal o
---

---
icials worried
that an uncontrolled run could leak into payment-systems plumbing.45 Federal
Reserve 46 Chair Jerome H. Powell and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent
urged Congress to establish a 
---
ederal lane and pre-empt inconsistent state
laws.47
      The legislative turning point came when the House Financial Services
Committee coupled consumer-protection concerns with a deregulatory carrot:
excluding bona 
---
ide payment stablecoins 
---
rom the de
---
inition o
---
 security in the
Securities Act o
---
 1933. 48 That exclusion promised relie
---
 
---
rom Rule 10b-5
litigation risk while preserving market-integrity goals through a new private
right o
---
 action under the Act. 49 This compromise built bipartisan support,
leading to rapid passage.

39
   Voluntary Dismissal, SEC v. Binance Holdings Ltd., No. 1:23-cv-01599 (D.D.C. May 29,
2025).
40
   Chainalysis, 2024 Crypto Crime Report, supra note 1, at 45(discussing con
---
usion in
regulatory landscape).
41
   Senate Comm. on Banking, Housing, & Urban A
---

---
airs, Hearing on “Stablecoins: Building
a Sa
---
er Payment System” 4 (June 15, 2022); Chainalysis, 2025 Crypto Crime Mid-Year
Report, supra note 1, at 12.
42
   Id.
43
   High-quality liquid assets (HQLA) are easily convertible to cash with minimal value loss,
such as government bonds or central bank reserves, o
---
ten mandated by regulators to ensure
liquidity in crises. Under Basel III rules, banks might hold U.S. Treasury securities as HQLA
to cover potential out
---
lows during a 30-day liquidity crunch.
44
   Chainalysis, 2025 Crypto Crime Mid-Year Report, supra note 1, at 12 (mini-runs and
gaps).
45
   Id. (
---
ederal concerns on runs).
46
   The Federal Reserve’s Board o
---
 Governors sets monetary policy and supervises banks.
During 2022-2023, 
---
or example, it raised interest rates to tame in
---
lation.
47
   Powell Testimony o
---
 2025.
48
   15 U.S.C. § 77b(a)(1) (2025); WilmerHale, supra note 2.
49
   GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 14(d).
8          STANFORD JOURNAL OF BLOCKCHAIN LAW & POLICY                              [Vol. 9.1



      I.C Immediate Post-Enactment Uncertainties

      The GENIUS Act was signed into law on July 18, 2025, creating
immediate uncertainties 
---
or market participants. 50 The statute establishes a
licensing regime 
---
or “permitted payment stablecoin issuers,” mandates 100
percent high-quality liquid reserves,51 and grants stablecoin holders senior
bankruptcy priority.52 Crucially, § 14(c) amends Securities Act § 2(a)(1) to
exclude a payment stablecoin 
---
rom the de
---
inition o
---
 “security” “when issued
in compliance with Pub. L. 119-27.”53 That move sharply narrows the reach
o
---
 Rule 10b-5 but simultaneously installs a new private right o
---
 action, giving
token holders a cause o
---
 action 
---
or reserve misstatements and delayed
redemptions.54
      Regulators now 
---
ace sequencing challenges. The Treasury Secretary
must prescribe disclosure templates and reserve-asset haircuts.55 The Federal
Reserve must determine how non-bank issuers may access master accounts.56
Courts must harmonize GENIUS with existing anti-
---
raud doctrines: does a
misstatement about reserves now 
---
all exclusively under the Act’s private
right, or can investors still invoke Rule 10b-5 against intermediaries? Early
district-court pleadings already raise that question.57
      The market response is equally 
---
luid. Bank-a
---

---
iliated issuers can
continue operations but must overhaul attestation work
---
lows. 58 Venture

---
unding has swung toward custody analytics59 and compliance-as-a-service60
startups. 61 State-based trust companies weigh whether to convert into


50
   GENIUS Act, supra note 2.
51
   Token issuance involves creating and distributing digital tokens, such as stablecoins,
typically minted on a blockchain. Redemption at par allows holders to exchange tokens back
to the issuer 
---
or their nominal value, like swapping one token 
---
or $1. Picture a user depositing
$100 into a stablecoin plat
---
orm, receiving 100 tokens, spending some on payments, and later
redeeming the rest 
---
or $100 in cash.
52
   Id. §§ 3, 4, 14.
53
   Id. § 14(c).
54
   Id. § 14(d).
55
   Id. § 4.
56
   Id. § 5.
57
   WilmerHale, supra note 2 (early pleadings on misstatements).
58
   WilmerHale, supra note 2 (overhaul 
---
or bank-a
---

---
iliated issuers).
59
   Custody analytics uses tools and blockchain 
---
orensics to monitor and veri
---
y assets held in
custody, ensuring transparency and spotting irregularities. Firms like Chainalysis, 
---
or
instance, help exchanges track wallet addresses to con
---
irm reserve holdings and 
---
lag
suspicious transactions.
60
   Compliance-as-a-service involves outsourced plat
---
orms providing tools 
---
or regulatory tasks
like anti-money laundering (AML) checks and know-your-customer (KYC) processes.
Elliptic, 
---
or example, o
---

---
ers crypto 
---
irms automated transaction monitoring to detect illicit
activity and produce regulatory reports.
61
   Chainalysis, 2025 Crypto Crime Mid-Year Report, supra note 1, at 12 (venture 
---
unding
shi
---
ts).
2025]                           THE GENIUS DILEMMA                                            9



---
ederally licensed issuers or rely on § 3(c)’s limited sa
---
e-harbor 62 while
lobbying 
---
or accommodating Treasury rules. 63 (Under GENIUS, state-
quali
---
ied issuers with ≤$10 billion outstanding may opt to remain under
comparable state regimes, but larger issuers must transition to 
---
ederal
oversight within 360 days.)64

      I.D Timeline to Legal E
---

---
ect

     The schedule embedded in Pub. L. 119-27 structures the transition yet
leaves critical gaps in timing:65

      Day           Milestone                            Practical consequence
   0           Enactment (July 18,                 Statute published at 139 Stat.
               2025)                               419.66
   0–270       Provisional                         Existing issuers must 
---
ile a
               registration                        notice o
---
 intent to comply with
               window67                            the Treasury Department.68
   ≤ 12 months Treasury & Federal                  Detailed reserve de
---
initions,
               Reserve                             disclosure templates, licensing
               rulemakings                         criteria.69
≤ 12 months    FSOC70 
---
irst annual                 Systemic-risk assessment and
               report                              recommendations.71




62
   A sa
---
e harbor shields entities 
---
rom liability i
---
 conditions are met, while a provisional
registration window allows temporary operation during compliance e
---

---
orts. The JOBS Act’s
crowd
---
unding sa
---
e harbor, 
---
or example, exempts small o
---

---
erings 
---
rom 
---
ull registration i
---

disclosures are provided.
63
   Arnold & Porter, Client Advisory, What You Need to Know About the New Stablecoin
Legislation 2 (July 21, 2025); Sidley Austin LLP, The GENIUS Act: A Framework 
---
or U.S.
Stablecoin Issuance (July 21, 2025),
https://www.sidley.com/en/insights/newsupdates/2025/07/the-genius-act-a-
---
ramework-
---
or-
us-stablecoin-issuance (noting state issuers with ≤$10 billion outstanding may opt 
---
or state-
only regulation under comparable regimes).
64
   GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 3(c).
65
   GENIUS Act, supra note 2, §§ 3, 4, 14, 15, 20.
66
   GENIUS Act, supra note 2(published at 139 Stat. 419).
67
   A provisional registration window allows temporary operation during compliance e
---

---
orts,
enabling existing stablecoin issuers to 
---
ile a notice o
---
 intent with the Treasury Department to
meet GENIUS Act requirements. For example, the JOBS Act’s crowd
---
unding provisions
allowed a similar transitional period 
---
or compliance.
68
   GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 20(a).
69
   GENIUS Act, supra note 2, §§ 4, 5.
70
   The Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC), established by Dodd-Frank, monitors
systemic risks and has studied stablecoin vulnerabilities, recommending regulatory

---
rameworks to prevent runs.
71
   GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 15.
10         STANFORD JOURNAL OF BLOCKCHAIN LAW & POLICY                             [Vol. 9.1


Three years        Unlicensed-issuance Any payment stablecoin issued
a
---
ter Treasury     ban                   without a license becomes per se
rules                                    unlaw
---
ul (§ 3(b)(2)).72
Continuous         Private en
---
orcement Holders may sue 
---
or reserve
                   under the Act         misstatements or untimely
                                         redemptions.73
      Table 1. Statutory Implementation Timeline 
---
or GENIUS

     This timeline underscores that the statutory 
---
ramework exists, but its
success hinges on rulemaking speed, supervisory coordination, and judicial
interpretation.74 How regulators de
---
ine acceptable reserves and how courts
reconcile the Act’s provisions with Rule 10b-5 will determine whether
Congress’s 
---
unctional approach yields the promised stability without chilling
responsible innovation. 75 Stakeholders should monitor Treasury notices
closely, as delays in rulemakings could extend the provisional window and
heighten uncertainty.

PART II: ARCHITECTURE OF PUBLIC LAW 119-27

      Congress did more than 
---
ill statutory gaps; it rewired several pillars o
---


---
ederal 
---
inancial regulation. Part II explains how lawmakers arrived at the
enacted text, unpacks the statute’s operative provisions, and identi
---
ies the
tools regulators must use to turn legislative language into durable rules. It
begins by situating GENIUS within a legislative lineage stretching back to
the 2019 Token Taxonomy Act. 76 Next, it parses the statute’s 
---
ive most
consequential provisions, with special attention to the new private right o
---

action and the re-de
---
inition o
---
 security in the Securities Act. Then, it maps the
rulemaking mandates and sa
---
e-harbor authority that will determine the law’s
practical bite. Finally, it transitions to the doctrinal and policy evaluation in
Part III.

      II.A Legislative Lineage

    E
---

---
orts to cra
---
t bespoke crypto legislation began with the Token
Taxonomy Act o
---
 2019. It would have removed “digital tokens” 
---
rom the
Securities Act de
---
inition o
---
 security.77 That bill never le
---
t committee, but it

72
   GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 3(b)(2).
73
   GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 14(d).
74
   WilmerHale, supra note 2 (success hinges on coordination).
75
   Rashad Ahmed & Iñaki Aldasoro, BIS Working Papers No. 1270 (2025) (implications 
---
or
innovation).
76
   The Token Taxonomy Act, a 2019 dra
---
t bill that didn’t pass, aimed to exclude certain

---
unctional digital tokens 
---
rom securities laws i
---
 not marketed as investments, seeking clarity

---
or blockchain projects.
77
   Token Taxonomy Act, H.R. 2144, 116th Cong. (2019).
2025]                         THE GENIUS DILEMMA                                       11


seeded a deregulatory argument. Payment-oriented crypto assets di
---

---
er

---
undamentally 
---
rom investment contracts. They there
---
ore deserve bespoke
treatment.78
      A second wave arrived with the CLARITY Act o
---
 2025. 79 It was
introduced shortly a
---
ter the collapse o
---
 several crypto lending plat
---
orms.80
CLARITY proposed an optional disclosure-plus-exemption model. Its 
---
ailure
in the Senate Banking Committee signaled that discretionary exemptions
could not command bipartisan con
---
idence.81
      GENIUS advanced by coupling deregulatory relie
---
 with hard prudential
constraints. The House Financial Services Committee built a coalition o
---

consumer-protection advocates and industry groups. It promised two
deliverables: exclusion o
---
 quali
---
ying stablecoins 
---
rom the de
---
inition o
---

security, and a bank-like reserve and disclosure regime that would quell run
risk.82 The bill passed both chambers with surprising speed once leadership
adopted these twin pillars.83 This lineage re
---
lects a progression 
---
rom broad
exemptions to targeted, balanced re
---
orms.

      II.B Key Provisions

      The enacted statute contains 23 sections, but 
---
ive do the heavy li
---
ting.
First, §§ 2 and 3 create the category o
---
 “permitted payment stablecoin issuer.”
They make it unlaw
---
ul 
---
or anyone else to issue or market a payment stablecoin
to U.S. persons.84 Licenses may be granted by the Treasury Department, the
Federal Reserve, the O
---

---
ice o
---
 the Comptroller o
---
 the Currency, 85 or
quali
---
ying state supervisors—subject to reciprocal recognition.86 The statute
thereby nationalizes what had been a state-centric trust-company model,
promoting uni
---
ormity while allowing state innovation.87




78
   Id. (deregulatory argument).
79
   The CLARITY Act o
---
 2025, a dra
---
t bill advanced in Congress, aims to create a
comprehensive regulatory 
---
ramework 
---
or digital assets, de
---
ining SEC and CFTC roles and
addressing custody and market structure. It builds on e
---

---
orts like the Clarity 
---
or Payment
Stablecoins Act.
80
   Creating Legal Accountability 
---
or Rigidly Innovating Token Yield (“CLARITY”) Act, H.R.
3633, 118th Cong. (2025).
81
   Id. (
---
ailure in Senate).
82
   WilmerHale, supra note 2 (coalition building).
83
   WilmerHale, supra note 2 (passage speed).
84
   GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 3(a)–(b), 139 Stat. 423–24.
85
   The O
---

---
ice o
---
 the Comptroller o
---
 the Currency (OCC) regulates national banks and, in
2020, issued guidance allowing banks to custody crypto assets.
86
   GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 3.
87
   WilmerHale, supra note 2 (nationalization o
---
 model).
12        STANFORD JOURNAL OF BLOCKCHAIN LAW & POLICY                              [Vol. 9.1


     Second, § 4 imposes a 100 percent reserve requirement. It is limited to
cash, Federal Reserve deposits, overnight repurchase agreements 88
collateralized by Treasuries, and Treasury bills 89 maturing in ninety-three
days or 
---
ewer.90 Paragraph (1)(B) requires same-day redemption at par. This
converts economic “parity” promises into a legal right.91 These provisions
address the core vulnerabilities exposed by TerraUSD, ensuring liquidity and
solvency.92
     Third, § 14(c) amends Securities Act § 2(a)(1). It states that “security”
does not include a payment stablecoin issued in compliance with this Act.93
The exclusion removes Rule 10b-5 liability 
---
or the coin itsel
---
. It is balanced
by § 14(d), which adds a private right o
---
 action. This allows token holders to
sue issuers 
---
or 
---
alse reserve statements or delayed redemptions. 94 The
provision borrows scienter 95 language 
---
rom § 10(b) but limits damages to
make-whole redemptions.96
     Fourth, § 3(e) extends the Act extraterritorially to any o
---

---
er directed at a
U.S. person. This codi
---
ies a standard 
---
ederal courts had applied unevenly
since Morrison v. National Australia Bank Ltd.97 The language also preempts
con
---
licting state blue-sky rules 
---
or payment stablecoins. 98 This provision
ensures U.S. users are protected regardless o
---
 issuer location.99
     Fi
---
th, § 22 deems every permitted issuer a “
---
inancial institution” under
the Bank Secrecy Act. This imports customer-identi
---
ication, suspicious-
activity reporting, and travel-rule obligations.100 FinCEN is directed to issue
con
---
orming rules within twelve months. 101 Collectively these provisions



88
   An overnight repurchase agreement (repo) involves selling securities, like Treasuries, with
a promise to repurchase them the next day at a slightly higher price, 
---
unctioning as a short-
term collateralized loan. Consider a hedge 
---
und needing quick cash: it might sell $10 million
in bonds to a bank via a repo, buying them back the next day 
---
or $10,001,000, with the
di
---

---
erence re
---
lecting the interest.
89
   Treasury bills (T-bills) maturing in 93 days or less, such as 4-week or 13-week terms, are
short-term U.S. government debt obligations, prized 
---
or their sa
---
ety. An investor might
purchase a 4-week T-bill 
---
or $99, receiving $100 at maturity, with the $1 di
---

---
erence
representing the interest earned.
90
   GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 4(a)(1)(A), 139 Stat. 428–29.
91
   GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 4(1)(B).
92
   Chainalysis, supra note 1, at 12-15.
93
   GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 14(c), 139 Stat. 454.
94
   GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 14(d).
95
   Scienter, per Ernst & Ernst v. Hoch
---
elder (1976), requires proo
---
 o
---
 intent or reckless
disregard in Rule 10b-5 
---
raud claims. Auditors, 
---
or instance, aren’t liable 
---
or mere
negligence; plainti
---

---
s must show they knowingly ignored red 
---
lags.
96
   Id. (scienter and damages).
97
   Morrison v. National Australia Bank Ltd., 561 U.S. 247 (2010).
98
   GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 3(e).
99
   WilmerHale, supra note 2 (legislative trade).
100
    Id.
101
    GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 22, 139 Stat. 456; 31 U.S.C. § 5312(a)(2) (2025).
2025]                           THE GENIUS DILEMMA                                  13


re
---
lect a legislative trade: investment-style anti
---
raud liability retreats, but
banking-style prudential and AML rules advance.102
      Sixth, the enacted version’s § 2(24) de
---
ines “person” to include “other
business entity.” 103 This is a notable change 
---
rom the introduced version,
which de
---
ined “person” more broadly by including “other entity.”104 States
including Wyoming and North Dakota interpret this to mean that the GENIUS
Act does not apply to state-issue stable tokens. 105 I
---
 this de
---
inition indeed
excludes governmental entities, then GENIUS has three pathways toward
stable tokens.
      Two pathways are obvious 
---
rom bill’s text itsel
---
: GENIUS de
---
ines both
“Federal quali
---
ied payment stablecoin issuer”106 and “State quali
---
ied payment
stablecoin issues,”107 making clear that issuers can exist under either 
---
ederal
or state regulatory 
---
rameworks.
      But states are not “persons,” so they are not subject to the GENIUS Act’s
licensing reserve, redemption, or reporting requirements. Thus, there is a third
shadow-pathway to stable token issued by state actors who are not subject to
GENIUS. Wyoming launched its Frontier Stable Token (FRNT) in August
2025 as a “constitutionally protected public asset.”108 North Dakota’s state-
owned bank is likewise launching its “Roughrider” coin outside the ambit o
---





102
      GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 22.
103
    Genius Act, supra note 2, § 2(24) (“The term ‘person’ means an individual,
partnership, company, corporation, association, trust, estate, cooperative
organization, or other business entity, incorporated or unincorporated.”) (emphasis
added).
104
    S. 394 § 2(16) as introduced in Senate on Feb. 2, 2025 (“The term ‘person’
means an individual, partnership, company, corporation, association (incorporated
or unincorporated), trust, estate, cooperate organization, or other entity.”) (emphasis
added).
105
    Seth C. Oranburg, GENIUS Act Revives Civil War-Era Banking Problem 
---
or
States, BLOOMBERG LAW (Aug. 18, 2025),
https://news.bloomberglaw.com/business-and-practice/genius-act-revives-civil-war-
era-banking-problem-
---
or-states [https://perma.cc/R5QC-PSUG].
106
    GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 2(11).
107
    GENIUS Act, supra note 2, 2(30).
108
    E.g., Omor Ibne Eshan, Wyoming Is Launching Its Frontier Stablecoin. Should
You Buy the State-Backed Crypto Here?, YAHOO! FINANCE (Aug. 25, 2025),
https://
---
inance.yahoo.com/news/wyoming-launching-
---
rontier-stablecoin-buy-
201917221.html; Eli
---
 Azra Güven, A US State Breaks Ground! Ethereum,
Avalanche, and Five Altcoins Selected 
---
or Its First-o
---
-its-Kind Stablecoin!,
BITCOINSISTEMI (Aug. 19, 2025), https://en.bitcoinsistemi.com/a-us-state-breaks-
ground-ethereum-avalanche-and-
---
ive-altcoins-selected-
---
or-its-
---
irst-o
---
-its-kind-
stablecoin/ [https://perma.cc/XK4E-7DJ7].
14        STANFORD JOURNAL OF BLOCKCHAIN LAW & POLICY                             [Vol. 9.1


GENIUS.109 Other states may 
---
ollow suit by creating other state-issued tokens
in the shadow o
---
 the GENIUS Act.

      II.C Implementation Toolkit

      Turning statutory text into workable policy requires at least three
coordinated rulemaking streams. The Treasury Secretary must 
---
irst issue
reserve-asset haircuts and disclosure templates. Without clear haircut
schedules, issuers cannot price the opportunity cost o
---
 holding short-dated
Treasuries versus cash. Investors cannot parse monthly attestation reports.110
This stream is critical 
---
or operationalizing the reserve requirements.
      Second, the Federal Reserve must decide master-account access 
---
or non-
bank licensees. Section 5 directs the Board to publish eligibility criteria. The
statute leaves timing and quantitative thresholds to the Fed. Early comments
suggest the Board may peg access to a leverage ratio111 or capital surcharge.112
This toolkit element addresses liquidity risks central to stablecoin stability.
      Third, interagency coordination will be pivotal. Section 3(c) gives
Treasury limited exemption authority—shaped by late-stage compromises
a
---
ter broad sandbox language drew skepticism. 113 The Stablecoin
Certi
---
ication Committee 114 (chaired by Treasury, with Fed and OCC
members) can certi
---
y state regimes as equivalent and waive certain
requirements 
---
or up to 24 months.115 This mechanism seeks to balance 
---
ederal
uni
---
ormity with state innovation, but much rides on how stringently the
Committee evaluates “substantially similar” state standards.116
      Fourth, FSOC oversight provides a macroprudential backstop. Section
15 mandates annual FSOC reports on stablecoin systemic risks. FSOC could




109
    Jacob Orledge, Bank o
---
 North Dakota to launch state’s 
---
irst stablecoin known as
Roughrider coin, NORTH DAKOTA MONITOR (Oct. 8, 2025),
https://northdakotamonitor.com/2025/10/08/bank-o
---
-north-dakota-to-launch-states-

---
irst-stablecoin-known-as-roughrider-coin/ [https://perma.cc/C9FQ-FEND].
110
    GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 4.
111
    A leverage ratio measures a 
---
irm’s debt relative to equity or assets, showing reliance on
borrowed 
---
unds. A bank with $10 in assets and $1 in equity has a 10:1 leverage ratio,
ampli
---
ying both gains and losses.
112
    GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 5.
113
    GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 3(c).
114
    The Stablecoin Certi
---
ication Committee (SCRC), created under the GENIUS Act o
---
 2025,
is an inter-agency body with Treasury, Fed, and SEC representatives, tasked with certi
---
ying
state stablecoin regulations to align with 
---
ederal standards, supporting a dual licensing
system.
115
    Id.
116
    Id.
2025]                           THE GENIUS DILEMMA                                         15


even invoke its Dodd-Frank powers117 to designate a stablecoin arrangement
as systemically important,118 though it has not used such authority in years.119
While GENIUS’s 
---
ramework is specialized, general administrative law still
applies—major rules will 
---
ace State Farm-style arbitrary-and-capricious
review120 i
---
 challenged.121 Robust interagency consultation and cost-bene
---
it
analysis are thus essential to insulate the new rules 
---
rom judicial
invalidation.122
     These tools collectively turn GENIUS 
---
rom legislative intent into
operational reality. Regulators must deploy them judiciously to avoid

---
ragmentation, as discussed in Part III.

PART III: ASSESSING GENIUS – DOCTRINAL COHERENCE, RISK
ALLOCATION, AND ENFORCEMENT DYNAMICS

      Part III evaluates whether GENIUS achieves its goal o
---
 marrying
innovation with market integrity. It begins by arguing that the Act’s carve-out
aligns with, rather than repudiates, core securities doctrines like Basic’s 
---
raud-
on-the-market presumption123 and Halliburton II’s price-impact rule.124 Next,
it examines the Act’s economic logic, suggesting it allocates calculable risks
to regulators while reducing Knightian uncertainty 125 in markets. Then, it
analyzes the new private en
---
orcement mechanism as a signaling device.


117
    Section 113 o
---
 the Dodd-Frank Act (2010) empowers the Financial Stability Oversight
Council (FSOC) to designate non-bank 
---
irms as systemically important, triggering stricter
oversight. Post-2008, FSOC applied this to 
---
irms like AIG, though some designations were
later li
---
ted.
118
    A systemically important designation 
---
lags institutions whose 
---
ailure could destabilize the
economy, triggering tougher rules. Post-Dodd-Frank, 
---
irms like Goldman Sachs 
---
ace higher
capital requirements and stress tests as SIFIs.
119
    Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 2021 Annual Report (2021),
https://www.
---
dic.gov/about/
---
inancial-reports/reports/2021annualreport/ (discussing FSOC
powers under Dodd-Frank).
120
    Arbitrary-and-capricious review, per Motor Vehicle Manu
---
acturers Ass’n v. State Farm
(1983), requires agencies to justi
---
y actions with reasoned explanations. The court, 
---
or
instance, vacated NHTSA’s airbag rule revocation 
---
or lacking su
---

---
icient rationale.
121
    Motor Vehicle M
---
rs. Ass’n v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 463 U.S. 29 (1983).
122
    WilmerHale, supra note 2 (discipline through review).
123
    The 
---
raud-on-the-market theory 
---
rom Basic Inc. v. Levinson (1988) lets securities 
---
raud
plainti
---

---
s presume reliance on public misrepresentations in e
---

---
icient markets. In class actions
over 
---
alse earnings reports, investors don’t need to prove they read the statements.
124
    The price-impact rebuttal 
---
rom Halliburton Co. v. Erica P. John Fund (2014) allows
de
---
endants to challenge 
---
raud-on-the-market claims by showing misstatements didn’t a
---

---
ect
stock prices. A company might use event studies to argue a misleading press release had no
market impact.
125
    Knightian uncertainty, named a
---
ter Frank Knight, describes unpredictable unknowns
without assignable probabilities, unlike calculable risks with known odds. While roulette
odds (1/38) represent calculable risk, predicting the economic impact o
---
 an unprecedented AI
breakthrough re
---
lects Knightian uncertainty due to the lack o
---
 historical data.
16        STANFORD JOURNAL OF BLOCKCHAIN LAW & POLICY                          [Vol. 9.1


Finally, it addresses potential counterarguments, transitioning to the global
perspectives in Part IV.

      III.A Doctrinal Coherence

      The Securities Act exclusion in § 14(c) appears, at 
---
irst glance, to
repudiate Basic Inc. v. Levinson’s 
---
raud-on-the-market doctrine. It exempts
payment stablecoins 
---
rom Rule 10b-5 entirely. 126 Yet the exemption is
narrower than it looks. It applies only to coins issued in compliance with Pub.
L. 119-27. Non-compliant tokens remain 
---
ully subject to the 
---
ederal securities
laws. The statute there
---
ore draws a bright doctrinal line. Fully collateralized,
licensed, and transparent stablecoins are not “securities”; those outside the
regime continue to be analyzed under Howey and its progeny.127 In e
---

---
ect,
Congress resolved a decade o
---
 ambiguity by codi
---
ying what counts as a purely
payment instrument.
      Rather than undercutting 
---
raud-on-the-market principles, GENIUS
operationalizes them in a di
---

---
erent way. Basic presumed that in an e
---

---
icient
market, public misrepresentations distort price; Halliburton II later allowed
de
---
endants to rebut this by showing no price impact.128 GENIUS preempts the
scenario entirely 
---
or compliant stablecoins: real-time reserve disclosures and
strict asset requirements mean that price should always re
---
lect 
---
undamental
value (one dollar), leaving little room 
---
or Basic-type misin
---
ormation to a
---

---
ect
the market price. 129 In that sense, § 14(c) can be read as completing the
trajectory o
---
 Halliburton II: it preserves price integrity by making material

---
acts (reserve status) continuously available, thereby reducing the need 
---
or
litigation presumptions.
      At the same time, GENIUS does not abandon the logic o
---
 Basic 
---
or the
broader crypto market. Non-compliant or algorithmic stablecoins, 130 and
other crypto tokens promising pro
---
its, remain subject to Rule 10b-5. Indeed,
Halliburton II’s 
---
ocus on price impact 
---
inds a parallel in GENIUS’s design:
any stablecoin that 
---
ails to maintain the mandated transparency would lose its
exemption and potentially 
---
ace anti
---
raud action, ensuring that only tokens
with demonstrably sound backing avoid securities treatment. 131 In short,
Congress re
---
ined—rather than rejected—the doctrinal toolkit, shi
---
ting it 
---
rom
courtroom to regulatory o
---

---
ice.

126
    Basic Inc. v. Levinson, 485 U.S. 224 (1988).
127
    GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 14(c).
128
    Halliburton Co. v. Erica P. John Fund, Inc., 573 U.S. 258 (2014).
129
    GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 4 (disclosures).
130
    An algorithmic stablecoin maintains its value through automated algorithms and smart
contracts that adjust token supply based on market demand, rather than relying on 
---
ull
collateral reserves. Imagine a scenario where a stablecoin’s price dips below $1 due to
waning demand; the algorithm might reduce the number o
---
 tokens in circulation by “burning”
some, aiming to nudge the price back to its target.
131
    Halliburton Co. v. Erica P. John Fund, Inc., supra note 121, at 279.
2025]                           THE GENIUS DILEMMA                                          17


     Beyond investor reliance, GENIUS also harmonizes with scienter
doctrine. The Act’s new private right borrows the 
---
amiliar “knowingly or
recklessly” standard 
---
rom § 10(b) jurisprudence, ensuring that only
intentional or highly reckless misstatements trigger liability.132 This mirrors
Ernst & Ernst v. Hoch
---
elder’s insistence on scienter 
---
or 10b-5 actions and
signals to courts that decades o
---
 case law on intent can guide the interpretation
o
---
 GENIUS’s cause o
---
 action.133 Likewise, pleading standards should 
---
ollow
Tellabs’ mandate that an in
---
erence o
---
 scienter be cogent and at least as
compelling as any opposing in
---
erence.134 By using established language, the
Act invites continuity: judges can apply Tellabs or PSLRA135 precedents to
weed out 
---
rivolous claims, preserving doctrinal consistency even as the
context shi
---
ts 
---
rom stocks to stablecoins.

      III.B Risk-Allocation E
---

---
iciency

      Economic theory distinguishes calculable risk 
---
rom Knightian
uncertainty.136 Traditional banking law manages measurable liquidity risk via
capital ratios and stress tests. 137 Uncertainty remains in the blind spot. 138
GENIUS attacks this problem by trans
---
orming what was uncertainty (the true
value o
---
 reserves in opaque stablecoins) into quanti
---
iable risk through
mandatory disclosures and asset rules. By 
---
orcing reserve composition into
Treasury bills and cash, the Act ties stablecoin stability to the well-modeled
risks o
---
 short-term sovereign debt.139
      This is evident in market dynamics: a recent BIS140 study 
---
ound that a
$3.5 billion in
---
low into stablecoins (prompting equivalent T-bill purchases)
could lower 3-month Treasury yields by ~2 basis points, whereas a $3.5
billion out
---
low raises yields by ~6–8 basis points.141 The asymmetry suggests
that redemptions (runs) hit harder than in
---
lows, re
---
lecting uncertainty-driven
surges in liquidity demand.142

132
    GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 14(d).
133
    Ernst & Ernst v. Hoch
---
elder, 425 U.S. 185 (1976).
134
    Tellabs, Inc. v. Makor Issues & Rights, Ltd., 551 U.S. 308 (2007).
135
    The Private Securities Litigation Re
---
orm Act (PSLRA) o
---
 1995 tightens rules 
---
or
securities class actions, requiring speci
---
ic pleading standards and limiting damages to curb

---
rivolous lawsuits. In a shareholder 
---
raud suit, 
---
or example, plainti
---

---
s must provide detailed
evidence o
---
 intent, not just broad allegations.
136
    Frank H. Knight, Risk, Uncertainty, and Pro
---
it ch. 7 (1921).
137
    Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 2021 Annual Report, supra note 112.
138
    Id.
139
    GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 4.
140
    The Bank 
---
or International Settlements (BIS) studies stablecoins’ economic impacts and
risks. A 2025 BIS report noted that $3.5 billion in stablecoin Treasury holdings could shi
---
t
short-term yields by 25 basis points, arguing stablecoins 
---
all short as sound money due to
stability and elasticity issues.
141
    BIS Working Papers No. 1270, supra note 75, at 1.
142
    Id.
18         STANFORD JOURNAL OF BLOCKCHAIN LAW & POLICY                             [Vol. 9.1


      By constraining reserves to near-riskless assets, GENIUS limits the
variance o
---
 those impacts. The same BIS paper noted that such reserve
mandates compress the risk premia 143 embedded in stablecoin prices—
essentially anchoring them to government debt yields.144 This may reduce
speculative trading on stablecoin solvency, shrinking the “uncertainty tax”
that markets previously extracted 
---
rom less certain stablecoins.145 In turn, that
could narrow the gap between privately optimal reserve levels and socially
optimal ones, aligning issuer incentives with systemic stability.146
      There is also an in
---
ormational e
---

---
iciency gain. Under GENIUS § 4,
monthly reserve attestations by a registered accounting 
---
irm become a
baseline transparency requirement. 147 In theory, this regular 
---
low o
---
 hard
in
---
ormation should replace the rumor-driven swings that characterized earlier
stablecoin episodes. Price volatility stemming 
---
rom misin
---
ormation or 
---
ear
could be dampened as 
---
acts become available on a set schedule. In 
---
inancial
terms, the Act attempts to convert an environment o
---
 uncertainty (unknown
reserve quality) into one o
---
 risk (known reserve quality with some variance).
Markets can price risk; they panic at uncertainty. GENIUS thus strives to

---
oster a more continuous equilibrium, although whether monthly disclosures
su
---

---
ice—versus real-time proo
---
s148—will be an area 
---
or 
---
uture re
---
inement.
      Lastly, the Act’s in
---
lexible rules do raise questions about innovation. By

---
reezing reserve composition to government-issued or overnight assets,
GENIUS bets that the e
---

---
iciency gains 
---
rom certainty outweigh the lost yield
or 
---
lexibility. Critics might argue this e
---

---
ectively turns stablecoins into narrow
banks,149 unable to evolve new models. But Congress appears to have judged
that, at least 
---
or a core payment medium, stability and predictability are
paramount. Given the systemic stakes (stablecoins serve as settlement and
liquidity in crypto markets), treating them as public money equivalents has a
compelling risk-utility rationale. I
---
 new technology allows di
---

---
erent risk
mitigation (e.g., real-time audits or algorithmic stabilization), regulators may


143
    A risk premium is the extra return investors seek 
---
or taking on calculable risk, while an
“uncertainty tax” metaphorically captures the economic drag 
---
rom Knightian uncertainty, like
reduced investments. In volatile markets, bond yields might include a 2% risk premium;
during geopolitical crises, an additional 1% “uncertainty tax” could emerge as investors
hoard cash.
144
    Id.
145
    Id.
146
    Id.
147
    GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 4(1)(B).
148
    Proo
---
-o
---
-reserves is a process, o
---
ten involving cryptographic methods or third-party
audits, to veri
---
y that a crypto custodian holds enough assets to cover all customer deposits or
tokens. Crypto exchange Kraken, 
---
or instance, uses independent audits to con
---
irm 1:1 asset
backing, updating reserve statuses on real-time dashboards 
---
or transparency.
149
    A narrow bank accepts deposits but invests only in sa
---
e assets like central bank reserves,
avoiding risky loans. Imagine a narrow bank parking all customer deposits at the Fed, earning
modest interest but o
---

---
ering lower rates to depositors due to minimal risk.
2025]                           THE GENIUS DILEMMA                                          19


need to revisit these strictures, but 
---
or now the pendulum clearly swings
toward minimizing unknowns.

      III.C Private En
---
orcement and Market Signaling

      The Act’s private right supplies the statute’s en
---
orcement teeth. Unlike
Rule 10b-5, the private right con
---
ers standing solely on token holders, not on
market traders who merely su
---

---
ered price impact.150 The class size there
---
ore
contracts to those directly exposed (e.g., people holding or transacting in the
stablecoin when a misstatement occurred). By eliminating constructive
reliance 
---
or non-holders, GENIUS curbs the “empty claimant” problem—
plainti
---

---
s who never touched the asset but join a class action because o
---

indirect price movements. In so doing, it mitigates strike-suit incentives151
that o
---
ten pressure deep-pocket de
---
endants into settlements under Rule 10b-
5’s expansive reach.152
      Moreover, damages under § 14(d) are capped at the amount necessary to
make holders whole (redeemable value plus interest), explicitly excluding the
punitive multibillion-dollar awards that can arise in securities 
---
raud class
actions.153 This aligns remedies with the actual economic harm (the inability
to redeem at $1) rather than speculative loss based on market gyrations. The
predictable cap could, in theory, reduce D&O insurance154 costs and reserve
bu
---

---
ers that issuers maintain 
---
or litigation—resources that could instead
bolster reserve quality. It’s a policy choice to trade o
---

---
 the deterrence o
---
 open-
ended liability 
---
or the containment o
---
 systemic costs and moral hazard.
      Yet private en
---
orcement remains a critical complement to agency
oversight. The SEC is largely sidelined 
---
or compliant stablecoins, so the onus
o
---
 detecting and punishing reserve 
---
raud 
---
alls to holders and their lawyers.
The Act, by incorporating scienter and reliance elements 
---
rom Rule 10b-5
jurisprudence, ensures that 
---
rivolous suits (those lacking strong evidence o
---

knowing deception) can be dismissed early, maintaining a high bar 
---
or
litigation. 155 Courts should import the PSLRA’s procedural 
---
ilters—like
heightened pleading and discovery stays—when adjudicating these cases,
given the analogous statutory wording.156 Early case law will likely set the
tone: a well-pleaded complaint that survives Tellabs scrutiny might establish

150
    GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 14(d).
151
    Strike-suit incentives drive meritless lawsuits to extract settlements due to high de
---
ense
costs. In securities class actions, attorneys might sue a
---
ter a stock drop, hoping 
---
or a quick
payout.
152
    WilmerHale, supra note 2 (strike-suit mitigation).
153
    GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 14(d).
154
    D&O insurance protects executives 
---
rom personal losses in lawsuits over their corporate
actions. A CEO sued 
---
or misleading statements might have legal 
---
ees covered by a D&O
policy.
155
    Ernst & Ernst v. Hoch
---
elder, supra note 126.
156
    Tellabs, Inc. v. Makor Issues & Rights, Ltd., supra note 127.
20        STANFORD JOURNAL OF BLOCKCHAIN LAW & POLICY                  [Vol. 9.1


the viability o
---
 these actions and incentivize robust compliance, whereas a
string o
---
 dismissals could signal that only egregious violations will 
---
ace
private penalty.157 In essence, GENIUS calibrates private en
---
orcement to be a
scalpel rather than a sledgehammer, aiming to slice out 
---
raud without
bludgeoning the industry.
      An open question is how the coexistence with Rule 10b-5 will play out.
GENIUS clearly removes 10b-5 liability 
---
or the stablecoin issuer regarding
the token itsel
---
, but what about secondary actors? For instance, i
---
 an exchange
or a
---

---
iliate made misstatements about a stablecoin’s risk, could investors sue
that intermediary under Rule 10b-5 (on the theory o
---
 a scheme or
misrepresentation “in connection with” a di
---

---
erent security or transaction)?
One imagines courts will be reluctant to allow an end-run around the Act’s
exclusive 
---
ramework, especially given Congress’s intent to channel these
disputes into the tailored cause o
---
 action. We are already seeing early
litigation 
---
eeling out these boundaries, and it may take a 
---
ew decisions to
clari
---
y that the Act preempts such creative claims.158 Assuming it does, the
stablecoin world will have a single private en
---
orcement avenue—one
narrower but more predictable than the sprawling 10b-5 universe.
      Finally, 
---
rom a market-signaling perspective, the mere existence o
---
 a
private right could enhance credibility. Investors know that i
---
 an issuer cheats,
they have recourse. This threat may deter corners-cutting and prompt issuers
to err on the side o
---
 conservative reserve management. In time, a pattern o
---


---
ew lawsuits could actually be a positive signal (indicating compliance),
whereas any major suit could quickly destroy con
---
idence in a coin. The

---
eedback loop is tight: transparency reduces need 
---
or suits; the prospect o
---

suits enhances transparency. I
---
 that equilibrium holds, GENIUS will have
struck a de
---
t balance—encouraging market discipline not through constant
litigation, but through the credible shadow o
---
 it.

      III.D Counter-Arguments and Caveats

     Critics raise three main objections. The 
---
irst is regulatory 
---
ragmentation:
GENIUS leaves multiple licensing pathways—
---
ederal bank, state trust, or
non-bank Treasury license. 159 Fragmentation, however, is mitigated by
reciprocal recognition and uni
---
orm asset standards. A state regime cannot
signi
---
icantly diverge i
---
 it wants certi
---
ication, and large issuers inevitably 
---
all
under 
---
ederal supervision as discussed. The Act essentially mimics dual
banking in the crypto context; while that may introduce some arbitrage, the
$10 billion threshold and 
---
ederal oversight triggers act as circuit breakers.160


157
    Id.
158
    WilmerHale, supra note 2 (remedies 
---
ine-tuned).
159
    GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 3.
160
    Id. (reciprocal recognition).
2025]                           THE GENIUS DILEMMA                                          21


Over time, one expects convergence rather than divergence, especially as
Treasury can tighten equivalence criteria i
---
 needed.
      A second concern is whether a primarily ex ante 
---
ramework 161 can
handle 
---
ast-moving 
---
raud or 
---
ailures. Skeptics point out that no matter how
strict the rules, bad actors may still lie about reserves or engage in risky o
---

---
-
balance-sheet schemes. I
---
 agencies are slow or under-resourced, problems
could 
---
ester (as in bank 
---
ailures where examiners miss red 
---
lags). In those
cases, would GENIUS’s limited private suits su
---

---
ice to uncover and recti
---
y
misconduct? Possibly not; private plainti
---

---
s usually act a
---
ter-the-
---
act, and i
---

in
---
ormation is tightly controlled by issuers, even the attestation process could
be gamed. The Act’s answer is heavy criminal penalties 
---
or 
---
alse statements
(stablecoin 
---
raud can be charged under existing bank 
---
raud statutes with up to
$1 million 
---
ines and jail time),162 and reliance on whistleblowers or auditors
to sur
---
ace issues. It remains a trade-o
---

---
: by curbing class actions, some 
---
raud
might slip through longer, but Congress likely calculated that the trade-o
---

---
 is
worth the innovation gains. Still, regulators must be vigilant—the

---
ramework’s credibility hinges on swi
---
t en
---
orcement o
---
 the most egregious
violations, lest con
---
idence erode.
      A third critique is that GENIUS might undercut innovation by ossi
---
ying
one model o
---
 stablecoins. The private right’s narrow scope could
disincentivize potential issuers who want to experiment outside the strict
limits, since doing so would mean entering the Wild West o
---
 
---
ull securities
law liability. Similarly, the reserve constraints e
---

---
ectively outlaw algorithmic
stablecoins or those using corporate debt, perhaps 
---
oreclosing 
---
uture
breakthroughs that could manage stability di
---

---
erently. Proponents would
respond that the catastrophic 
---
ailure o
---
 TerraUSD and others justi
---
ied taking
those o
---

---
 the table—at least until a proponent can convincingly demonstrate
a sa
---
er design. The Act does allow the Treasury Secretary (with Fed input) to
expand permissible reserves or grant targeted exemptions, 163 so there is a
sa
---
ety valve 
---
or innovation. But use o
---
 that valve will demand compelling
evidence. In short, the law is intentionally conservative; it is easier to relax
rules later than to tighten them a
---
ter a crisis. Whether that stance holds in a
global competition (i
---
 other jurisdictions allow more experimentation) is a
strategic question beyond doctrinal boundaries.

PART IV: GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES – MICA, SINGAPORE’S PSA, AND
GENIUS’S UNIQUE SYNTHESIS



161
    Ex ante prudential oversight involves proactive rules like capital reserves to prevent
issues, while ex post anti
---
raud litigation addresses violations a
---
ter they occur. A regulator
might require annual bank stress tests (ex ante) or sue a 
---
ailed bank 
---
or misleading investors
(ex post).
162
    18 U.S.C. § 1344 (2025).
163
    GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 3(c).
22        STANFORD JOURNAL OF BLOCKCHAIN LAW & POLICY                           [Vol. 9.1


      U.S. lawmakers did not write on a blank slate. Part IV compares
GENIUS’s approach with the EU’s comprehensive Markets in Crypto-Assets
Regulation (MiCA) and Singapore’s evolving Payment Services Act (PSA)
regime. The contrast reveals GENIUS as a hybrid model, blending aggressive
prudential rules with private en
---
orcement—a combination not 
---
ully seen
elsewhere. It begins by examining MiCA’s all-in licensing and prudence.
Next, it explores Singapore’s 
---
lexible start and tightening 
---
uture. Then, it
moves toward a global synthesis. Finally, it transitions to the implementation
roadmap in Part V. These comparisons o
---

---
er both validation and cautionary
tales, in
---
orming U.S. regulators as they implement the Act.

      IV.A Europe’s MiCA: All-in Licensing and Prudence

      The European Union took a top-down approach in MiCA, which was
adopted on April 20, 2023 and began phasing in 2024.164 MiCA requires any
issuer o
---
 asset-re
---
erenced tokens (including stablecoins tied to 
---
iat) to secure
prior authorization 
---
rom a national regulator be
---
ore o
---

---
ering the token in the
EU. 165 In practice, this is a license-
---
irst, operate-later regime: no EU
circulation without regulatory approval o
---
 a detailed crypto-asset white paper
and compliance with capital and governance rules. 166 There are no
grand
---
athered incumbents—existing stablecoin issuers had to apply anew by
MiCA’s e
---

---
ective date. GENIUS, by contrast, a
---

---
orded a transition period and
provisional registration, re
---
lecting a more iterative rollout to avoid market
disruption.167
      MiCA’s prudential requirements parallel GENIUS’s in spirit but di
---

---
er
in 
---
lexibility. For “e-money tokens”168 (single-
---
iat stablecoins), MiCA Article
36 mandates issuers maintain a reserve o
---
 low-risk assets at 100% o
---

outstanding tokens—but notably, it permits up to 20% o
---
 reserves to be held
in highly liquid bank deposits.169 By comparison, GENIUS § 4 allows no such
latitude: reserves must be cash or ≤93-day Treasuries only.170 The U.S. opted

---
or a stricter de
---
inition o
---
 “high-quality liquid asset,” likely in
---
luenced by its
experience with money market 
---
und runs and a desire 
---
or absolute clarity on
liquidity.171 EU regulators, having contended with negative interest rates and
bank reliance, allowed a bit o
---
 diversi
---
ication (e.g., bank deposits) on the

164
    Regulation (EU) 2023/1114, o
---
 the European Parliament and o
---
 the Council o
---
 31 May
2023 on Markets in Crypto-Assets, 2023 O.J. (L 150) 40.
165
    Id. arts. 16–23, 43–51.
166
    Id.
167
    GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 20(a).
168
    An “e-money token” under MiCA is a crypto-asset tied to a single 
---
iat currency, like
electronic money, with strict reserve and redemption rules. A hypothetical euro-pegged
“EURT” token would require the issuer to hold 
---
ull euro reserves.
169
    Regulation (EU) 2023/1114, supra note 115, art. 36.
170
    GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 4.
171
    WilmerHale, supra note 2 (stricter U.S. limit rationale).
2025]                            THE GENIUS DILEMMA                                            23


theory that short-term bank debt can be sa
---
e in moderation. 172 The
transatlantic di
---

---
erence in reserve composition limits may thus re
---
lect
di
---

---
erent 
---
inancial contexts and risk tolerances. Still, both regimes converge
on requiring 
---
ull (or near-
---
ull) collateralization and prohibiting the risky
rehypothecation173 practices that contributed to past crypto crashes.
      Another distinction is en
---
orcement modality. MiCA relies on
administrative en
---
orcement: marketing communications must be “
---
air, clear
and not misleading,” per Article 76, but violations are addressed by regulators
via 
---
ines or withdrawal o
---
 authorization, not by private lawsuits.174 In other
words, MiCA opts 
---
or a purely public model—investors cannot sue an issuer
under securities-
---
raud theories because these tokens aren’t “securities” in EU
law, and no separate private cause exists. GENIUS, conversely, purpose
---
ully
gra
---
ts a private en
---
orcement limb onto its prudential trunk.175 This re
---
lects the
U.S. legal culture’s greater trust in private litigation as a market-policing
mechanism. The EU choice streamlines en
---
orcement through regulators (who
can act 
---
aster in some cases), but may su
---

---
er i
---
 regulators lack resources or
resolve. The U.S. choice introduces potential litigation costs but could catch
misconduct that slips through bureaucratic cracks. Over time, each will yield
data on e
---

---
ectiveness: Europe may see 
---
ewer court dramas but more pressure
on agencies, whereas the U.S. might have the opposite.
      Finally, MiCA’s scope is broader in covering the 
---
ull spectrum o
---
 crypto-
assets, but within stablecoins it draws lines between “signi
---
icant” stablecoins
and others. I
---
 an asset-re
---
erenced token exceeds certain thresholds (volume,
users, or value), it 
---
aces additional oversight 
---
rom the European Banking
Authority, akin to systemically important status. 176 GENIUS doesn’t
explicitly designate “systemic” stablecoins, but the FSOC reporting and the
$10 billion state oversight cuto
---

---
 serve a similar tiering 
---
unction.177 In both
regimes, big players get heightened scrutiny one way or another. The lesson
seems to be: contain risks by scaling oversight with scale o
---
 operations—a
principle likely to be mirrored globally as stablecoins become integral to

---
inance.

    IV.B Singapore’s VASP Rules: A Flexible Start, a Tightening
Future



172
    Id.
173
    Rehypothecation happens when a 
---
inancial institution uses client-deposited assets, like
securities, as collateral 
---
or its own borrowing, ampli
---
ying risks i
---
 markets 
---
alter. In traditional

---
inance, a broker might use a client’s stocks to secure a loan; in crypto, some custodians

---
aced backlash 
---
or rehypothecating user assets, a 
---
actor in collapses like FTX.
174
    Regulation (EU) 2023/1114, supra note 157, art. 76.
175
    GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 14(d).
176
    Regulation (EU) 2023/1114, supra note 157, art. 36.
177
    GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 15.
24        STANFORD JOURNAL OF BLOCKCHAIN LAW & POLICY                             [Vol. 9.1


      Singapore amended its PSA in 2021 to extend licensing to digital-
payment-token service providers. 178 The Monetary Authority o
---
 Singapore
(MAS)179 grants licenses on an activity basis: exchange, trans
---
er, or custody
each requires separate approval and compliance with AML and technology-
risk standards. 180 Capital and sa
---
eguarding requirements scale with
transaction volume, and providers must segregate customer assets in trust.181
Unlike MiCA and GENIUS, Singapore’s PSA initially did not mandate
reserve-asset composition and has instead relied on segregation and
disclosure obligations to control run risk.182 (In August 2023, MAS 
---
inalized
a stablecoin 
---
ramework to ensure the value stability, requiring issuers o
---

“MAS-regulated stablecoins” to maintain 100% reserve assets in cash, cash
equivalents, or ≤3-month government debt and to honor redemption within

---
ive days—bringing Singapore’s approach closer to a prudential model.)183
MAS also exercises discretionary powers to issue conditional or restricted
licenses, tailoring requirements to 
---
irm-speci
---
ic risk (
---
or instance, imposing
additional capital on a stablecoin issuer or limiting business lines i
---
 deemed
necessary).
      Singapore’s en
---
orcement record provides another data point. MAS
issued 35 reprimands and one license cancellation across the broader
payments and crypto sectors in 2023/24. It imposed its 
---
irst AML-related
composition penalties under the PSA in June 2025 against 
---
ive providers
(totaling S$1.3 million in 
---
ines).184 The light en
---
orcement touch may re
---
lect
high compliance or limited supervisory capacity—or both. Notably, no major
stablecoin incidents have originated in Singapore, perhaps due to the
relatively small scale o
---
 its issuers and proactive risk management by 
---
irms
seeking to maintain Singapore’s reputation. Still, some observers argue that
the absence o
---
 stronger action indicates that a purely activity-based regime
might miss latent risks until they materialize, as regulators are not delving
into reserves or business models unless problems emerge.
      From an innovation perspective, Singapore’s 
---
lexible licensing sparks
entrepreneurship but risks supervisory lag.185 GENIUS splits the di
---

---
erence:
incumbents get time to adapt, new entrants 
---
ace up
---
ront hurdles, and everyone

178
    Payment Services (Amendment) Act 2021 (Act 2 o
---
 2021) (Sing.),
https://sso.agc.gov.sg/Acts-Supp/2-2021.
179
    The Monetary Authority o
---
 Singapore (MAS) oversees monetary policy and 
---
intech,
including crypto regulations. It licenses payment 
---
irms under the PSA and sets stablecoin
guidelines.
180
    Id. § 6.
181
    Id.
182
    Id.
183
    Morgan Lewis, Monetary Authority o
---
 Singapore Finalises Stablecoin Regulatory
Framework (Aug. 22, 2023), https://www.morganlewis.com/pubs/2023/08/monetary-
authority-o
---
-singapore-
---
inalises-stablecoin-regulatory-
---
ramework.
184
    Monetary Authority o
---
 Singapore, En
---
orcement Actions (July 3, 2025),
https://www.mas.gov.sg/regulation/en
---
orcement/en
---
orcement-actions.
185
    Payment Services (Amendment) Act 2021, supra note 171 (
---
lexible licensing).
2025]                         THE GENIUS DILEMMA                                      25


must converge on identical reserves.186 In e
---

---
ect, the U.S. chose to tolerate
less diversity in stablecoin models in exchange 
---
or more certainty, whereas
Singapore historically tolerated more diversity at the expense o
---
 potential
unseen 
---
ragilities. However, with MAS’s new stablecoin rules (which closely
parallel GENIUS in requiring high-quality reserves and timely redemption),
the gap is narrowing. One could argue Singapore used a sandbox mentality—
let the market grow 
---
irst, then regulate key aspects—while the U.S. jumped
to de
---
ine the end-state structure nationally. Each path has merits: Singapore’s
MAS combines central-bank 
---
unctions with market supervision, enabling
agile, activity-based oversight that could adapt quickly;187 U.S. regulators are

---
ragmented, thus GENIUS allocates duties across Treasury, the Fed, and state
supervisors, 
---
orcing them into collaboration. 188 E
---

---
ective coordination
mechanisms—Treasury-Fed joint guidance or FSOC memoranda—will be
critical to emulate the nimbleness that a unitary regulator like MAS enjoys.189
      Looking ahead, Singapore’s limited en
---
orcement demonstrates the limits
o
---
 agency capacity.190 MiCA may 
---
ace similar constraints once EU issuance
scales.191 GENIUS anticipates this by embedding a private right o
---
 action.192
Yet private en
---
orcement raises its own design questions: damage caps may
discourage large investors 
---
rom suing i
---
 losses are small, and 
---
ederal
preemption means all cases crowd into 
---
ederal courts, potentially creating a
bottleneck i
---
 dozens o
---
 suits arise 
---
rom a single incident.193 The comparative
lesson is that regulation o
---
 stablecoins is not a one-time 
---
ix but an ongoing
governance challenge. Whether through regulatory 
---
lexibility (Singapore),
comprehensive licensing (EU), or a blended approach (U.S.), the regime must
evolve with the market’s rapid innovation cycles while maintaining the
public’s trust in a stable value instrument.

      IV.C Toward a Global Synthesis

      None o
---
 the major jurisdictions have a monopoly on wisdom in this
arena. The EU’s MiCA, Singapore’s PSA, and the U.S. GENIUS Act all aim
to tame stablecoins, but each emphasizes di
---

---
erent tools. A possible
convergence is visible: transparency and high-quality reserves are emerging
as universal pillars (MiCA Art. 36, MAS’s 2023 
---
ramework, and GENIUS §
4 all hammer on this point).194 Conversely, approaches to en
---
orcement and

186
    GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 20.
187
    Monetary Authority o
---
 Singapore, Annual Report 2024/25.
188
    GENIUS Act, supra note 2, §§ 3, 5.
189
    WilmerHale, supra note 2 (coordination critical).
190
    Monetary Authority o
---
 Singapore, En
---
orcement Actions, supra note 177.
191
    Regulation (EU) 2023/1114, supra note 157 (constraints at scale).
192
    GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 14(d).
193
    WilmerHale, supra note 2 (design questions).
194
    Regulation (EU) 2023/1114, supra note 157, art. 36; Payment Services (Amendment) Act
2021, supra note 127; GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 4.
26         STANFORD JOURNAL OF BLOCKCHAIN LAW & POLICY                             [Vol. 9.1


innovation vary—Europe leans on administrative control, the U.S. on a mix
o
---
 regulation and litigation, and Singapore on phased regulation with later
tightening. Over time, i
---
 one approach yields markedly better outcomes (e.g.,

---
ewer runs, more innovation, or better integration with traditional 
---
inance),
others will likely adapt.
      Already, cross-pollination is happening. European regulators are
watching U.S. developments, especially the interplay o
---
 private suits and
market behavior, since the EU historically hasn’t empowered private crypto
litigation. 195 U.S. o
---

---
icials, in turn, scrutinize MiCA’s rollout 
---
or any
regulatory arbitrage 196 or unintended consequences—such as crypto 
---
irms
relocating to Europe 
---
or a more uni
---
ied regime. 197 Singapore continues to
serve as a regional hub whose experiments (like exchange licensing and now
stablecoin reserves) provide valuable case studies.198 In a sense, stablecoin
governance is in its “laboratory” phase globally, with each major 
---
ramework
a live experiment. The likely endgame could be a set o
---
 international
standards or mutual recognitions, especially i
---
 stablecoins underpin cross-
border payments at scale. GENIUS explicitly nods to this by allowing 
---
oreign
stablecoins 
---
rom comparable regimes to operate in the U.S. upon OCC
registration and U.S. reserve custody.199 That comparability assessment will
e
---

---
ectively judge MiCA, Singapore, and others against the U.S. benchmark,
incentivizing a race to high standards.
      In conclusion, GENIUS’s strictness stands out—some call it the
“strictest stablecoin regime in the world”200—but it may set a norm that others
gradually approach. Its novel blend o
---
 prudential rigor and private
en
---
orcement o
---

---
ers a distinctive model, potentially in
---
luencing global
standards as jurisdictions learn 
---
rom each other’s experiments.

PART V: IMPLEMENTATION ROADMAP – TURNING GENIUS INTO REALITY

     The GENIUS Act’s promise hinges on execution. Part V provides a
practical roadmap 
---
or stakeholders, drawing on the analysis in Parts I–IV to
o
---

---
er actionable guidance. It addresses 
---
our audiences: regulators, industry
players, legal stakeholders, and policymakers. For each, it outlines immediate
steps, anticipates challenges, and suggests strategies to align implementation
with the Act’s goals o
---
 stability, innovation, and anti
---
raud protection.



195
    WilmerHale, supra note 2 (transparency constant).
196
    Global regulatory arbitrage in crypto involves operating in jurisdictions with lax rules to
avoid compliance costs. Many exchanges base in places like the Seychelles to o
---

---
er leveraged
trading banned in stricter regions like the U.S. or EU.
197
    Regulation (EU) 2023/1114, supra note 157.
198
    Payment Services (Amendment) Act 2021, supra note 171.
199
    GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 20.
200
    WilmerHale, supra note 2 (strictest regime).
2025]                          THE GENIUS DILEMMA                                       27


      V.A For Regulators (Treasury, Federal Reserve, OCC, FSOC)

     Regulators 
---
ace a tight timeline to operationalize GENIUS. The Treasury
Department should prioritize issuing reserve-asset haircut schedules and
disclosure templates within six months o
---
 enactment to give issuers clarity.201
These rules must balance precision (e.g., speci
---
ying acceptable T-bill
maturities) with 
---
lexibility (e.g., allowing minor deviations 
---
or operational
needs). The Federal Reserve’s master-account criteria 
---
or non-bank issuers
are equally urgent; early indications suggest a leverage-based approach, but
the Board must avoid overly restrictive thresholds that exclude smaller
players, as this could consolidate the market unduly.202
     Interagency coordination is non-negotiable. The Stablecoin Certi
---
ication
Committee should establish clear metrics 
---
or state-regime equivalence to
prevent arbitrage.203 Treasury’s exemption authority under § 3(c) should be
used sparingly, reserved 
---
or truly innovative pilots with robust risk controls.
FSOC’s annual reports must go beyond boilerplate, leveraging BIS and
Chainalysis data to quanti
---
y systemic risks and recommend targeted
adjustments. Regulators should also prepare 
---
or judicial challenges—majority
rules must be grounded in rigorous cost-bene
---
it analyses to withstand State
Farm scrutiny.204
     A global lens is critical. Treasury should engage with IOSCO, BIS, and
the FSB to shape emerging standards, ensuring U.S. interests (e.g., AML
compliance and dollar dominance) are protected.205 Bilateral agreements with
the EU and Singapore could pave the way 
---
or mutual recognition, reducing
compliance burdens 
---
or cross-border issuers while maintaining high
standards.206

      V.B For Industry (Issuers, Exchanges, Custodians)

     Issuers should initiate internal “GENIUS readiness” audits. For those
planning to become permitted issuers, this means shoring up reserve
management processes, engaging auditors 
---
or monthly attestations, and
ensuring redemption operations can meet same-day demands. Those deciding
not to seek a license (perhaps due to business model incompatibility) 
---
ace a
hard stop: continuing to issue unlicensed stablecoins a
---
ter the grace period
will be illegal. Such 
---
irms might pivot to other crypto products or relocate to

201
    Id. (litigation risk management).
202
    Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 2021 Annual Report (2021),
https://www.
---
dic.gov/about/
---
inancial-reports/reports/2021annualreport/ (examiner
adaptation).
203
    GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 3(c).
204
    Motor Vehicle M
---
rs. Ass’n v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 463 U.S. 29 (1983).
205
    WilmerHale, supra note 2 (discipline through review).
206
    This might be done via bilateral agreements or through bodies like IOSCO or the BIS’s
Innovation Hub.
28        STANFORD JOURNAL OF BLOCKCHAIN LAW & POLICY                         [Vol. 9.1


jurisdictions outside U.S. reach (though extraterritorial provisions make that
risky i
---
 they have U.S. users). Exchanges and custodians will need to review
their listings—a
---
ter three years post-rulemaking, any stablecoin not issued by
a permitted issuer is contraband in e
---

---
ect. Delisting non-compliant coins
ahead o
---
 time would mitigate en
---
orcement risk. These intermediaries should
also strengthen disclosure to users about what regulatory status each
stablecoin has (akin to how stockbrokers label whether an asset is SIPC-
insured or not). Proactively investing in compliance tech—like real-time
reserve veri
---
ication solutions or analytics that monitor issuer assets—could
become a competitive advantage, as users gravitate to plat
---
orms that
transparently prove stablecoin sa
---
ety.
      Bank-a
---

---
iliated issuers can continue operations but must overhaul
attestation work
---
lows to comply with the new standards.207 Venture 
---
unding
has swung toward custody analytics and compliance-as-a-service startups,
signaling market demand 
---
or tools that 
---
acilitate GENIUS adherence.208 State-
based trust companies weigh whether to convert into 
---
ederally licensed
issuers. They could rely on § 3(c)’s limited sa
---
e-harbor while lobbying 
---
or
accommodating Treasury rules. 209 (Under GENIUS, state-quali
---
ied issuers
with ≤$10 billion outstanding may opt to remain under comparable state
regimes, but larger issuers must transition to 
---
ederal oversight within 360
days.)
      For counsel to existing issuers, the immediate task is to navigate the 270-
day provisional registration window. Counsel should assemble a cross-

---
unctional team—compliance, 
---
inance, engineering—to map current reserve
assets against the statutory list and to dra
---
t a reserve-transition plan. Early
Treasury guidance suggests that issuers unable to achieve 100 percent
quali
---
ying reserves by Day 270 must 
---
ile a remediation schedule as part o
---

their notice.210

      V.C For Legal Stakeholders (Litigators, Courts, Scholars)

     The early jurisprudence o
---
 GENIUS will be crucial. Plainti
---

---
s’ attorneys
should prepare 
---
or uncharted waters in pleading these new claims. Expect
de
---
ense counsel to argue by analogy to securities cases—e.g., invoking Blue




207
    WilmerHale, supra note 2 (overhaul 
---
or bank-a
---

---
iliated issuers).
208
    Chainalysis, 2025 Crypto Crime Mid-Year Report, supra note 1, at 12 (venture 
---
unding
shi
---
ts).
209
    GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 3(c).
210
    Treasury Fin’l Stability Oversight Council, GENIUS Act Guidance—FAQ No. 1 (July 30,
2025).
2025]                           THE GENIUS DILEMMA                                           29


Chip Stamps 211 to limit standing strictly to actual holders, or Janus 212 to
contest who the “maker” o
---
 a reserve misstatement is (the issuer vs. possibly
an o
---

---
icer). Judges can be guided by 
---
amiliar principles but must also heed the
statute’s unique 
---
eatures (like the damages cap, which may require novel jury
instructions or summary judgment standards 
---
or quanti
---
ying “make-whole”
amounts). It will be important to resolve certain issues early: 
---
or instance, do
GENIUS Act claims 
---
all under 
---
ederal question jurisdiction straight
---
orwardly
(yes, as a 
---
ederal statute cause, likely with exclusive 
---
ederal jurisdiction akin
to ‘34 Act claims)?213 And will PSLRA provisions (like the discovery stay)
apply automatically, or will courts import them as a matter o
---
 policy? 214
Litigators should also prepare 
---
or evidentiary challenges—proving a reserve
misstatement might involve parsing blockchain records or requiring third-
party custodians to testi
---
y, raising hearsay or 
---
oundation issues. A strategic
consideration: because damages are limited, plainti
---

---
s’ 
---
irms may opt 
---
or
smaller class sizes or even individual actions i
---
 the class mechanism seems
ine
---

---
icient. Courts might see more bench trials or streamlined proceedings
given the relatively straight
---
orward remedy (pay the redemption plus
interest).
      For scholars, GENIUS o
---

---
ers 
---
ertile ground 
---
or interdisciplinary
analysis. Economists can model the Act’s impact on stablecoin liquidity
premiums using BIS data on Treasury yield e
---

---
ects. 215 Legal theorists can
explore how the carve-out re
---
ines Howey’s 
---
unctional test in 
---
intech
contexts. 216 Policy analysts should track 
---
raud incidence post-
implementation, using Chainalysis benchmarks to assess whether private
rights under the Act deter misconduct as e
---

---
ectively as Rule 10b-5.217
      Early case law will likely set the tone: a well-pleaded complaint that
survives Tellabs scrutiny might establish the viability o
---
 these actions and
incentivize robust compliance, whereas a string o
---
 dismissals could signal that
only egregious violations will 
---
ace private penalty.218 In essence, GENIUS


211
    The standing limit 
---
rom Blue Chip Stamps v. Manor Drug Stores (1975) restricts Rule
10b-5 lawsuits to actual securities buyers or sellers. Investors who avoided buying a stock
due to 
---
raud can’t sue; only those who traded and lost can.
212
    The “maker” doctrine 
---
rom Janus Capital Group v. First Derivative Traders (2011) limits
Rule 10b-5 liability to entities with ultimate control over a statement’s content. A mutual

---
und advisor, 
---
or example, isn’t liable 
---
or statements in a 
---
und’s prospectus i
---
 the 
---
und issues
it.
213
    Grable & Sons Metal Prods., Inc. v. Darue Eng’g & M
---
g., 545 U.S. 308 (2005).
214
    Tellabs, Inc. v. Makor Issues & Rights, Ltd., 551 U.S. 308 (2007).
215
    BIS Working Papers No. 1270, supra note 75.
216
    SEC v. W.J. Howey Co., 328 U.S. 293 (1946).
217
    Chainalysis, supra note 1, at 45.
218
    The ISO 20022 messaging standard is a global 
---
ramework 
---
or 
---
inancial communications,
supporting rich, structured data exchange in payments and securities. SWIFT’s adoption o
---

ISO 20022 
---
or cross-border payments allows banks to include detailed in
---
ormation, like
invoice numbers, in transaction messages.
30        STANFORD JOURNAL OF BLOCKCHAIN LAW & POLICY                          [Vol. 9.1


calibrates private en
---
orcement to be a scalpel rather than a sledgehammer,
aiming to slice out 
---
raud without bludgeoning the industry.

      V.D For Policymakers and Future Revisions

      Implementation will undoubtedly reveal areas needing 
---
ine-tuning. One

---
oreseeable adjustment is the scope o
---
 permissible reserve assets. I
---

macroeconomic conditions change (e.g., prolonged negative interest rates or
a shortage o
---
 T-bills), regulators might seek 
---
lexibility to include other sa
---
e
assets. Any such move should be evidence-based and perhaps conditional (
---
or
example, allowing certain AAA commercial paper up to a small percentage i
---

justi
---
ied by market conditions). Another likely area o
---
 evolution is
interoperability and standards: as stablecoins become embedded in payment
systems, the government might issue standards on API access, messaging

---
ormat (ISO 20022 compliance219), or other technical matters to ensure they
plug into FedNow 220 or cross-border networks seamlessly. 221 Additionally,
coordination with existing crypto en
---
orcement remains vital. The SEC and
CFTC will continue policing 
---
rauds involving crypto assets that 
---
all outside
GENIUS’s ambit (e.g., algorithmic “stablecoins” not covered). Agencies
should clari
---
y via guidance how GENIUS and pre-existing regulatory

---
rameworks intersect—perhaps a joint statement that 
---
or any token labeled a
“stablecoin” that doesn’t quali
---
y under the Act, the SEC will presumptively
treat it under Howey until proven otherwise, to remove any doubt about
continuing authority.
      Ongoing empirical evaluation is essential. The Act calls 
---
or FSOC
reports, but academia and industry should supplement with independent
research: Has the incidence o
---
 
---
raud or run events decreased? What are the
innovation outputs (number o
---
 new projects, capital raised) in the stablecoin
space post-Act versus pre-Act? Are markets pricing stablecoin risk more
uni
---
ormly? These data will in
---
orm whether GENIUS indeed delivered on its
promise or i
---
 
---
urther legislative tweaks are warranted. For instance, i
---
 private
suits prove too rare (perhaps because damages are too low to attract lawyers),
Congress might consider enhancing penalties or granting regulatory agencies
like the CFPB some oversight 
---
or consumer protection. Conversely, i
---

innovation appears stymied (say, U.S. stablecoin market share globally



219
    FedNow®, launched by the Federal Reserve in 2023, is an instant payment service
enabling real-time, round-the-clock interbank trans
---
ers in the U.S. A small business, 
---
or
instance, might use FedNow to receive a customer payment at midnight, bypassing the delays
o
---
 traditional ACH trans
---
ers.
220
    Tellabs, Inc. v. Makor Issues & Rights, Ltd., supra note 127.
221
    As stablecoins become embedded in payment systems, the government might issue
standards on API access, messaging 
---
ormat (ISO 20022 compliance), or other technical
matters.
2025]                           THE GENIUS DILEMMA                                           31


declines sharply), policymakers might introduce more 
---
lexibility or
sandboxes within the 
---
ramework.222
      One should also keep an eye on the international dimension. Treasury’s
role in recognizing 
---
oreign stablecoin regimes will pressure U.S. regulators to
articulate what “comparable” means. It’s plausible that a group o
---

jurisdictions (G7 or G20) could converge on mutual principles such that a

---
oreign issuer could operate across multiple markets with one primary license.
U.S. policymakers should engage in that dialogue early, to both share the U.S.
experience and to ensure U.S. interests (like law en
---
orcement access to
transaction data) are baked into any global 
---
ramework.223 This might be done
via bilateral agreements or through bodies like IOSCO or the BIS’s
Innovation Hub.224

CONCLUSION

      The GENIUS Act emerged 
---
rom a con
---
luence o
---
 crisis and
opportunity—a desire to prevent another TerraUSD and to unleash the
bene
---
its o
---
 stablecoins under a sa
---
er, uni
---
ied regime. Its success now hinges
on diligent implementation. Early indicators are promising: markets reacted
with cautious optimism, and some major issuers signaled intent to obtain

---
ederal licenses, validating the Act’s approach. 225 Internationally, U.S.
leadership in crypto regulation has been bolstered, with some 
---
oreign
regulators mulling similar carve-outs 
---
or payment stablecoins. Yet the Act’s
promise is not sel
---
-executing. As detailed in the implementation roadmap,
success hinges on expeditious rulemaking—particularly Treasury’s reserve
haircuts and the Federal Reserve’s master-account criteria—and on judicial

---
idelity to the private right’s calibrated remedies. Without interagency
coordination and vigilant oversight, GENIUS risks perpetuating the very
uncertainties it seeks to dispel, inviting either under-deterrence o
---
 
---
raud or
over-deterrence o
---
 innovation. Policymakers must there
---
ore view the Act not
as a terminus but as a 
---
ramework demanding iterative re
---
inement, in
---
ormed
by empirical monitoring o
---
 
---
raud incidence and market liquidity.



222
    A regulatory sandbox lets 
---
irms test innovations under relaxed rules with oversight; a
limited exemption waives speci
---
ic regulations temporarily. The UK’s FCA sandbox allows

---
intech trials, while a crypto 
---
irm might get a limited exemption to pilot services without 
---
ull
licensing.
223
    U.S. policymakers should engage in that dialogue early, to both share the U.S. experience
and to ensure U.S. interests (like law en
---
orcement access to transaction data) are baked into
any global 
---
ramework.
224
    IOSCO, a global securities regulator body, sets standards 
---
or crypto markets to protect
investors. It has issued principles 
---
or regulating crypto trading plat
---
orms akin to traditional
exchanges.
225
    GENIUS Act, supra note 2, § 14(d); some major issuers signaled intent to obtain 
---
ederal
licenses.
32      STANFORD JOURNAL OF BLOCKCHAIN LAW & POLICY                [Vol. 9.1


     In an era where stablecoins underpin trillions in cross-border payments
and decentralized 
---
inance, GENIUS o
---

---
ers a pragmatic path 
---
orward: stability
without stagnation. I
---
 
---
aith
---
ully implemented, it could trans
---
orm stablecoins

---
rom a regulatory a
---
terthought into a resilient pillar o
---
 the U.S. 
---
inancial
system. The coming years will reveal whether this congressional wager pays
o
---

---
—or whether 
---
urther amendments will be needed to secure the digital
dollar’s 
---
uture.
