Home » Fed Proposes KYC for Payment Stablecoin Issuers

Fed Proposes KYC for Payment Stablecoin Issuers

Fed Joins 4 Agencies to Demand ID Programs From Payment Stablecoin Operators 1

What the Fed Is Proposing

The Fed’s Board of Governors published a proposal June 18, 2026, that would require certain payment stablecoin issuers to maintain formal customer identification programs, commonly known as CIP or KYC requirements.

The proposal mirrors existing requirements applied to banks and credit unions supervised by the Fed. The rule was issued jointly with four other agencies, signaling broad regulatory coordination across the U.S. financial system.

Public comments are due 60 days after the proposal appears in the Federal Register.

Barr’s Warning: The GENIUS Act Has Gaps

Federal Reserve Governor Michael S. Barr expressed support for the proposal but delivered a pointed warning alongside it.

“I remain concerned that the GENIUS Act regulatory framework does not do enough so far to address the risks of illicit finance conducted through secondary market transactions in payment stablecoins,” Barr said in his official statement.

The GENIUS Act is the recently advanced U.S. legislative framework for stablecoin oversight. Barr’s concern centers on a specific vulnerability: even if primary issuers face KYC rules, bad actors can still move stablecoins through secondary markets with limited oversight.

The Secondary Market Problem

Barr noted that while some digital asset service providers face anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing requirements in their home jurisdictions, those rules are easy to sidestep in practice.

“It is far too easy for bad actors to evade these restrictions and operate without detection when transacting in digital assets,” he said.

Barr said he will review public comments on whether any part of the new CIP rule should extend to secondary market activity, and that he plans to assess whether the full GENIUS Act framework provides adequate protection against stablecoin-related illicit finance.

Why This Matters

The stablecoin market has grown into a core piece of digital asset infrastructure, with total supply exceeding $300 billion across major issuers. That scale has drawn increasing attention from regulators focused on how stablecoins can move value across borders with speed and relative anonymity.

Requiring payment stablecoin issuers to implement the same identity verification banks use is a direct effort to close that gap at the point of issuance. But Barr’s statement makes clear that issuance is only part of the problem.

What Comes Next

The 60-day comment window opens the floor to issuers, financial institutions, consumer groups, and legal experts to weigh in before any rule is finalized.

Barr’s explicit signal that he is weighing secondary market rules suggests this proposal may be the first of several regulatory steps, not the last.

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