The post FDIC Stablecoin Meeting April 7: GENIUS Act and CLARITY Act Are Moving This Month appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
The FDIC just called a board meeting for April 7 with less than seven days notice. The agenda: finalizing how U.S. banks can issue stablecoins under the GENIUS Act.
The FDIC board will consider a proposed rulemaking specifically covering GENIUS Act requirements for FDIC-supervised permitted payment stablecoin issuers – the legal mechanism that determines how traditional banks enter the stablecoin market through subsidiaries.
It will also address anti-money laundering standards and a final rule on the use of reputation risk by regulators.
GENIUS Act Stablecoin Rules: What the FDIC Is Deciding on April 7
Signed by President Trump on July 18, 2025, the GENIUS Act established the first federal framework for stablecoins in U.S. history. But signing a law and implementing it are two different things.
The FDIC, OCC, and Treasury are all racing to finalize implementation rules by July 18, 2026 – exactly one year after enactment. The law takes effect 120 days after those rules are finalized, with January 18, 2027 as the outer deadline.
The April 7 meeting is one piece of that machinery. The Treasury has already released its first set of proposed rules and opened a 60-day public comment period. The OCC has filed its own proposals. Now the FDIC is moving.
Federal Reserve Governor Michael Barr has been measured about expectations: “While the GENIUS Act made important progress in creating a regulatory framework for stablecoins, a great deal will depend on how federal and state regulators implement the statute.”
He flagged that the real test lies in the implementation details – specifically around reserve requirements, regulatory arbitrage risks, capital standards, and consumer protections.
Also Read: Stablecoins Are Bigger Than Visa Now: What Does That Mean for Your Money?
The CLARITY Act Clock Is Running at the Same Time
While regulators implement the GENIUS Act, a second and larger bill is racing toward its own deadline. The CLARITY Act, which covers broader crypto market structure, has a Senate Banking Committee markup targeted for the second half of April, after Easter recess ends on April 13.
Coinbase’s Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal said earlier this week that a stablecoin yield deal was ‘very close’, a signal that negotiations may be further along than the public timeline suggests.
Senator Bernie Moreno has been direct: if the bill doesn’t reach the Senate floor by May, digital asset legislation may not move again for years.
The FDIC meeting on April 7 is where that process takes the next step.
