On September 19, 2025, the Department of the Treasury published an advance notice of proposed rulemaking to solicit public comment on questions relating to implementation of the GENIUS Act. Comments are due October 20, 2025.Continue Reading ›
MemeCore: The $4B Ghost Chain of Memecoins
Someone explain this to me: a coin just casually hit a $4B market cap and Crypto Twitter… said nothing. No “wen Binance” copypastas. No wojak memes drowning the feed. Not even a lazy doge edit. Nothing.
The project? MemeCore.
And it’s not even a degen shitcoin — it’s a Layer 1 chain built for…
SEC and CFTC Announce Harmonization Initiative and New Crypto Developments
The agencies pledge to “usher in a new era of innovation” through a collaboration on rules and exemptions that aims to provide digital asset markets with clarity.
By Stephen P. Wink, Zachary Fallon, Yvette D. Valdez, Douglas K. Yatter, Jenny Cieplak, Adam Bruce Fovent, and Deric Behar
The SEC’s…
Nasdaq Proposes to Allow Trading of Tokenized Securities
On September 8, 2025, the Nasdaq Stock Market submitted a proposed rule change to the Securities and Exchange Commission that, if implemented, would allow for the trading and settlement of tokenized securities. Nasdaq points out that even traditional securities are traded in electronic format, and that it should not be a stretch to allow settlement using…
L2s: Adoption Up, Bags Flat
Licensed to Mint: Inside the GENIUS Act’s Game-Changing Rules
In July 2025, President Donald Trump signed the bipartisan-supported Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act (the “GENIUS Act” or the “Act”) into law. The GENIUS Act is the first major federal law that specifically regulates the cryptocurrency industry, establishing a comprehensive regulatory framework for payment stablecoins in the U.S. The Act, which will take effect by January 2027 (or earlier if final regulations implementing the Act are issued), significantly reshapes the legal landscape for digital assets in the U.S. and may provide momentum for further Congressional actions in the digital assets space.
Generally speaking, a stablecoin is a type of cryptocurrency designed to maintain a stable value by being pegged to a reserve asset, such as a fiat currency, a commodity, or a basket of reliable assets. Stablecoins aim to provide price stability, making them useful for everyday transactions, trading, and decentralized finance (DeFi) applications, including liquidity pools for collateral in lending and borrowing and as payments for low-cost borderless transactions. Stablecoins collectively represent hundreds of billions of dollars in market cap, underscoring the significance of the Genius Act’s goal to provide legal clarity and a structured framework for stablecoin issuance and oversight. The law also seeks to enhance trust and reduce the custodial and operational risks of stablecoins that were evidenced in recent years during a major algorithmic stablecoin collapse and a “depegging” incident of a major stablecoin. Overall, the law covers digital finance regulation, consumer protection, anti-money laundering (AML) compliance, federal and state regulatory frameworks, bankruptcy, and U.S. monetary policy in general.
To do this, the Act:
- Formally defines “payment stablecoins”
- Limits the integration of algorithmic stablecoins into the mainstream financial system and only recognizes fiat-backed stablecoins as permitted payment stablecoins
- Establishes a federal licensing framework for domestic and foreign issuers
- Sets standards for reserves and redemption and prohibits “rehypothecation”
- Clarifies regulatory oversight between federal and state regulators and expressly states that licensed stablecoins are not securities or commodities
- Enhances transparency and consumer protections, including in the event of issuer insolvency
- Contains provisions related to anti-money laundering (AML) compliance
- Seeks to legitimize stablecoins under U.S. law, incentivize the use of U.S. Treasury bonds as reserve assets and generally position the U.S. as a leader in digital finance
FDIC Issues Proposal on Signage and Advertising Requirements
The FDIC seeks to avoid overburdening financial services providers with regulations regarding its logo after assessing market feedback and implementation issues.
By Arthur S. Long, Parag Patel, Pia Naib, Connor Jobes, and Deric Behar
On August 19, 2025, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) board of directors approved a proposed rule…
UK ICO Launches Consultation on Distributed Ledger Technologies Guidance
On August 28, 2025, the UK Information Commissioner’s Office initiated a public consultation on draft guidance on Distributed Ledger Technologies, focusing on blockchain.Continue Reading ›
DOJ Official Addresses DeFi Platform Developer Liability Under Money Transmission Statute
DOJ will focus on criminal intent over mere code creation, seeking to balance legal accountability with support for innovation.
By Zachary Fallon, Jack McNeily, Benjamin Naftalis, Parag Patel, Barrie VanBrackle, Eric S. Volkman, Stephen P. Wink, Iris Xie, Douglas K. Yatter, and Deric Behar
On August…
SEC Staff Clarifies That Liquid Staking Activities Do Not Implicate US Federal Securities Laws
The Staff provides the market with additional crypto clarity, holding that liquid staking does not qualify as a security under the Howey test.
By Jenny Cieplak, Zachary Fallon, Yvette D. Valdez, Stephen P. Wink, Hank Balaban,* Adam Bruce Fovent, Daphne Lambadariou, and Deric Behar
On August 5, 2025,…
