Cointime

Download App
iOS & Android

Sen. Gillibrand Warns Against a ‘Watered-Down’ Stablecoin Bill

What to know:

  • Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand told attendees at the D.C. Blockchain Summit on Wednesday that Congress could potentially pass long-awaited stablecoin legislation before the Easter recess.
  • Gillibrand warned the industry against pushing for a "watered down" version of the bill, stressing that stringent regulations were necessary to protect consumers and attract investors.

U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), one of the leading Democrats supporting crypto legislation, warned the industry against pushing for a “watered-down” version of the long-awaited stablecoin legislation currently moving through the Senate, arguing that stringent regulations are necessary to foster innovation and protect investors from bank runs like the one on Silicon Valley Bank in 2023 and the collapse of crypto exchange FTX in 2022.

Speaking at the D.C. Blockchain Summit in Washington, D.C. on Wednesday, Gillibrand said that the bipartisan stablecoin bill — Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act (GENIUS Act) — creates a number of protections for consumers in the event of an issuer bankruptcy scenario.

“You have to think through all the ways this can go wrong. Something as simple as how you define a dollar — is a Treasury the same as a dollar? What happens if your 1-to-1 backing is all in Treasuries and you have an interest rate misalignment like SVB just did, and you have a run on your stablecoin and all your dollar-to-dollar backing is in a three-month Treasury that you can’t get out of – that’s a run on your stablecoin, that’s a collapse,” Gillibrand said.

If dollar-backing requirements are not met or enforced, Gillibrand said: “You’ll just have another FTX. You’ll just have another algorithmic stablecoin that plunges because it never really made sense. That is a huge problem for the U.S. market.”

“The worst thing we could do is water it down,” Gillibrand said. “Do not think that a watered-down bill will help your industry. It will destroy your industry. Because one more SVB, one more algorithmic stablecoin [collapse], just continues to create such uncertainty that nobody wants to do business in the United States.”

After years of false starts, stablecoin legislation appears to finally be gaining momentum. Earlier this month, the U.S. Senate Banking Committee voted to advance the GENIUS Act to a Senate-wide vote. A similar bill from the U.S. House of Representatives is expected to go public on Wednesday.

Gillibrand said that if Congress is able to get the GENIUS Act signed into law, it is then more likely to be able to make progress on a market structure bill.

“A market structure bill is much more complex. It regulates the entire industry, not just one version of a digital asset,” Gillibrand said. “So it’s really important that we do this right so we can move to something much bigger, and something we need to build even broader consensus around.”

A market structure bill would create a regulatory framework for the crypto industry as a whole, giving crypto companies and digital asset issuers clearer rules of the road and a framework to determine whether their tokens are securities or not — and therefore, who their primary regulator is.

Speaking on the same panel, Sen. Bernie Moreno (R-Ohio) suggested that any digital asset with a centralized issuer is likely to be a security, not a commodity.

“If your digital currency has a CEO it's not a commodity, by definition,” Moreno said.

During another panel discussion at the same event on Wednesday, Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.), said the future market structure bill would need to “find a way to create a structure that works beyond the two major categories” of security vs. commodity.

Moreno said he wanted to see the GENIUS Act passed before the August recess.

“I’m gonna lay out the gauntlet — let’s get this done by August recess, what do you think? Markets structure, GENIUS Act, [Strategic Bitcoin Reserve], all done by August,” Moreno said.

Gillibrand tempered expectations, telling Moreno that there was no way to get a market structure bill done by August, but that Congress is “definitely going to get stablecoins done” before the summer break — perhaps, she amended, even before the Easter recess in April, “if we’re really productive.”

Comments

All Comments

Recommended for you

  • Bitcoin miner Core Scientific shifts to AI with 1.5GW data center push

    Core Scientific is converting its Pecos, Texas site into a high-density AI colocation hub, repurposing 300MW of mining capacity.

  • Acting AG Todd Blanche confirms ‘code is not a crime’ in DOJ pivot

    Acting US Attorney General Todd Blanche said developers will no longer be investigated or charged unless they knowingly help third parties commit crimes.

  • Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda: No Immediate Need for Rate Hike

    On April 28, Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda stated that there is currently no immediate need to raise interest rates. However, if the current supply shocks lead to secondary ripple effects, a rate hike may be necessary. (Jin Shi)

  • Central Political Bureau Meeting: Comprehensive Implementation of 'AI+' Initiative to Develop New Intelligent Economy and Improve AI Governance

    On April 28, the Central Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China held a meeting to analyze and study the current economic situation and economic work. The meeting emphasized the need to accelerate the construction of a modern industrial system and maintain a reasonable proportion of manufacturing. It called for deepening the construction of a unified national market and addressing 'involutionary' competition. The meeting also announced the comprehensive implementation of the 'AI+' initiative to develop a new intelligent economy and improve AI governance. Furthermore, it highlighted the need to deepen state-owned enterprise reform, systematically respond to external shocks and challenges, enhance the security of energy and resource guarantees, and address various uncertainties with the certainty of high-quality development. (Dongxin News Agency)

  • ByteDance, Zhiyu, and Alibaba Selected Among Top 10 AI Influencers by TIME

    On April 28, TIME announced its list of the '10 Most Influential AI Companies of 2026.' Unlike a simple comparison of model capabilities, this list emphasizes the comprehensive shaping power of companies in terms of industry, technological pathways, and social impact. The selected companies include ByteDance, Amazon, Zhiyu, OpenAI, Alphabet, Meta, Anthropic, Alibaba, Mistral, and Hugging Face. Among them, three are domestic companies: ByteDance, Zhiyu, and Alibaba. (Dongxin News Agency)

  • Arthur Hayes: More Concerned About Fed Nominee Waller's Comments on Balance Sheet Than Short-Term Interest Rates

    On April 28, BitMEX founder Arthur Hayes spoke about the Federal Reserve at the Bitcoin 2026 conference, stating, "When Kevin Waller was nominated as the Fed's SEC chairman, everyone started to panic because during his tenure as a Fed governor— I believe from the 2008 financial crisis until the current president— he has been very critical of the Fed's massive balance sheet. He has publicly stated that he believes the Fed's balance sheet is too large and that he needs to find ways to shrink it while also being able to lower interest rates. Now, if you have read my articles, you know that I am a firm advocate of the idea that the quantity of money is more important than its price. Therefore, I am more concerned about his comments on the balance sheet than the direction of short-term interest rates. So, if the market believes that due to Waller's actions at the Fed, the liquidity of dollars circulating in the system will decrease, then they will be bearish on Bitcoin and other risk assets. This is the discussion we see in the media about a hawkish Fed emerging after Waller takes over in May. Now, I don't think so. I believe that essentially the Fed will replace reserves, treasury bonds, and repos and put them into the commercial banking system, and they will do this with the help of new regulations concerning how banks hold assets on their balance sheets and how much capital they need to hold against those assets. Finally, I think the most important point to understand about what Waller will or will not do at the Fed is that he has a very substantial hard constraint, which is that he needs to work with Treasury's Scott Bessen to ensure that any actions he takes regarding the Fed's balance sheet do not impair Bessen's ability to sell billions and trillions of dollars in bonds.

  • SEC Chair: Reg GG Crypto to Allow Private Sector Token Sales Soon

    On April 28, U.S. SEC Chair Gary Gensler stated in an interview at the Bitcoin 2026 conference that the agency will continue to advance other exciting initiatives, such as truly allowing companies to conduct on-chain experiments, build tokenized securities, and trade on-chain within the United States. We plan to release innovative exemption regulations in the coming weeks. Additionally, we will permit the private sector to raise funds through on-chain token sales, which we refer to as 'Reg GG Crypto.' These initiatives are in preparation and will be launched soon. Currently, there is a bill titled the 'Clarity Act' under consideration in Congress. We do need Congress to provide regulations in this area. We are ready, willing, and able to explain their regulations and translate them into rules that people can rely on and pursue their innovative ideas. It is important to emphasize that this is happening domestically in the U.S., so they do not have to go overseas. This is the core idea that truly matters here.

  • SEC Chair Discusses Clarity Act: Codified Law Provides Greater Assurance for the Future

    On April 28, during the Bitcoin 2026 Conference, SEC Chair Gary Gensler spoke about the Clarity Act, stating that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has considerable operational flexibility under the regulations. However, we are constrained by existing authorities, which, despite some amendments over the years, fundamentally remain rooted in the framework established in the 1930s. This is why having a piece of legislation is so important; it can shield future developments from adverse impacts, allowing us to leverage new authorities and the flexibility provided by the Act. We can collaborate with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to coordinate and clarify definitions, and further develop from there. But again, nothing provides greater assurance for the future than codified law, coupled with sound judicial opinions that engrave the provisions of the law in stone through the mechanisms of the entire court system. Therefore, all of this is very important, but we are focused on efforts to simplify processes, enhance efficiency, and assist innovators in their endeavors, enabling them to operate with certainty rather than being stifled by those who jealously guard the existing ways of doing things. However, we must ensure that we remain at the forefront of innovation in the United States.

  • Meta Prepares to Withdraw Acquisition of Manus; Investors Including Tencent Plan to Cooperate

    On April 28, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing informed sources, that after the Office of Foreign Investment Security Review under China's National Development and Reform Commission made a legal decision to prohibit foreign investment in the Manus project, Meta is preparing to withdraw from the acquisition deal. According to sources, if Meta proceeds with the withdrawal process, several former Asian investors in Manus, including Tencent, Sequoia China, and ZhenFund, have planned to cooperate.