Paradigm is pushing back on FDIC GENIUS Act stablecoin rules while backing the law’s core guardrails, setting up a fight over whether regulators can stretch a stablecoin yield ban beyond what Congress actually wrote.
In a June 9, 2026 post, Paradigm said it filed a comment letter responding to the FDIC’s proposed rule for permitted payment stablecoin issuers. The firm said it supports 1:1 reserve backing, monthly public reporting, and authorization for banks to offer custody and exchange, but wants the agency to withdraw provisions it says go beyond the GENIUS Act.
Paradigm Wants the FDIC to Stick to the Statute
The sharpest dispute is over yield. In the Federal Register proposal, the FDIC said it would presume an issuer violates the GENIUS Act’s interest-and-yield prohibition if the issuer arranges for an affiliate or related third party to pay yield to stablecoin holders, though the issuer could submit written materials to rebut that presumption.
Paradigm said that reading is an unlawful expansion, not a cleanup. The firm wrote that the statute does not let the FDIC prohibit third parties from paying yield, even if the agency can police what the issuer itself does.
“Nothing in the GENIUS Act permits the FDIC to either prohibit third parties from paying yield.”
Quoted by Paradigm
Because the disputed language specifically reaches “affiliate or related third party” arrangements, the fight is really about how far the FDIC can extend the law beyond the issuer itself. That could hit adjacent rewards models now being tested across finance, including ideas surfaced in SBI Shinsei to Launch Crypto Rewards for Depositors This Fall: Report.
The Rule Fight Is Bigger Than One Yield Clause
The docket timing amplified the clash. The FDIC’s comments page for RIN 3064-AG19 says the comment period ended on June 9, 2026, and the same page identifies the proposal as 91 FR 18534.
The proposal also says reserve deposits backing a payment stablecoin would be insured as the corporate deposits of the issuer, not on a pass-through basis to token holders. By classifying reserves that way in the proposed rule text, the FDIC is defining how much protection stablecoin users can expect if those funds sit inside the banking system.
That insurance question matters because the benchmark U.S.-regulated stablecoin market is already large; USDC carried about $75.05 billion in market capitalization at the time of research.
Liquidity is just as hard to ignore. USDC posted roughly $14.32 billion in 24-hour volume in the same snapshot, a reminder that the FDIC’s drafting choices will land in a market where dollar-backed tokens already move at scale.
Why Issuers Care About the Final Draft
Paradigm’s position is not anti-rulebook. In its filing summary, the firm said it backs reserve requirements and disclosure standards, while the FDIC said in its April proposal announcement that the rule is meant to implement GENIUS Act requirements for FDIC-supervised issuers and related custodial activity.
With reserve requirements and disclosure largely undisputed, the real fight is over scope. If the FDIC keeps the affiliate-yield presumption and the reserve-insurance treatment intact, issuers may have to rethink how they market rewards, custody, and exchange services around dollar tokens, even as traders keep watching broader crypto signals like Kalshi Market Gives Bitcoin 59% Odds of Hitting $50,000 Before $100,000.
The policy stakes also spill past trading screens because corporate crypto activity is still moving, as shown by Brazilian Public Company OranjeBTC Buys 41 More Bitcoin, Holdings Reach 3,803 BTC. That broader activity helps explain why bank-facing stablecoin rules now carry more weight than a niche policy debate would suggest.
Under the FDIC’s proposal, the GENIUS Act framework would take effect on January 18, 2027, or 120 days after final implementing rules are issued, if earlier. That gives the agency a short runway to decide whether Paradigm’s last-day objections stay buried in the docket, or force changes to the final stablecoin playbook.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.