The Federal Reserve is working to release its framework for payment stablecoins under the GENIUS Act. On the surface, it looks like another regulatory milestone.
The more interesting question is what regulators are no longer debating.
Not long ago, discussions around stablecoins focused on whether they should be allowed to exist inside the financial system. That conversation is gradually being replaced by a different one.
The focus is shifting toward how they should operate.
Regulation Is Now About Building the Market
Rules governing reserves, issuers and supervision are not being drafted for a hypothetical technology. They are being designed for a market that already processes hundreds of billions of dollars and is becoming increasingly connected to traditional finance.
That distinction matters.
Markets usually reach a new stage of maturity when regulators stop questioning their legitimacy and begin defining the standards under which they will operate.
Many important questions remain unresolved, from issuer eligibility to reserve management and oversight.
But the nature of the debate has changed.
The Fed’s latest work suggests stablecoins are no longer being treated primarily as an experiment. They are increasingly being viewed as financial infrastructure that requires the same regulatory clarity expected from any system becoming part of the broader economy.
