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Six Federal Agencies Propose Bank-Style ID Rules For Stablecoin Issuers

Published Jun 18, 2026
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Summary:
  • The Fed, OCC, FDIC, NCUA, and FinCEN proposed rules requiring stablecoin issuers to verify customer names, keep records, and run checks against terrorist watchlists.
  • The proposal applies the Bank Secrecy Act framework to a stablecoin market that has grown to over $300 billion, covering issuers like Circle and Tether for the first time under a single federal standard.
  • Fed Governor Michael Barr flagged a gap in the rule, warning that ID checks stop at the point of issuance and do not follow tokens through secondary trades where most daily volume occurs.

Crypto was supposed to be the place you didn't have to hand over your ID. That's about to change.

Five U.S. agencies just proposed rules that treat stablecoin issuers like banks. That means knowing exactly who their customers are.

Stablecoins are digital tokens pegged 1-to-1 to the dollar - think USDC and USDT - and the market has grown to over $300 billion.

USDC comes from Circle, the publicly-traded firm that listed last year, while USDT is issued by Tether, a private company that dominates global crypto trading volume.

Stablecoin Issuers Get The Bank Treatment

The proposal came Thursday from the Fed, OCC, FDIC, NCUA and the Treasury's FinCEN, requiring issuers like Circle and Tether to verify each user's name and address, keep records of those checks, and run names against government terrorist watchlists.

That's the same Bank Secrecy Act framework - the 1970 law that built the U.S. anti-money-laundering system - that's covered banks and brokerages for decades. The goal is to block illicit cash flows and terrorist funding.

Until now, stablecoin issuers operated under a patchwork of state money-transmitter rules. There was no single federal standard for checking who their customers were.

The rule comes out of the GENIUS Act, the first major U.S. crypto law, passed last year. It pulled stablecoin issuers into the same regulatory world as the big banks for the first time.

The law gave issuers a federal pathway to operate. It tied that pathway to the same oversight rules that apply to chartered banks.

Every morning, Market Briefs breaks down how moves like this actually hit your portfolio - in five minutes a day, with a free investing masterclass thrown in when you join.

Fed Governor Flags A Gap In The Rule

Fed Governor Michael Barr put out his own statement saying the rule still leaves a hole - it covers issuers and the customers who buy tokens directly from them, but not what happens next.

Once those tokens get traded between wallets and exchanges around the world, the ID trail goes cold. In Barr's words, it's "far too easy for bad actors to evade these restrictions and operate without detection when transacting in digital assets."

He said he'll be watching whether ID rules eventually get extended to those secondary trades, which make up the bulk of daily stablecoin volume. Without that step, he argued, the system still has a door left open.

What To Watch

The agencies opened a 60-day public comment window, with the last similar round drawing 450 comments. Expect this one to draw more, given how much the stablecoin market has grown since then.

After comments close, the agencies will review the feedback and issue final rules. Then enforcement starts, with penalties that could reach the same level banks face for BSA violations.

The GENIUS Act made stablecoins legal at the federal level. Now comes the paperwork.

If you want to see how stories like this play out before they show up in your portfolio, join 350,000+ investors reading Market Briefs - you also get a 45-minute investing course as a bonus.

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