FSOC drops crypto assets from financial vulnerabilities list in latest report

Source Cryptopolitan

The Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC) has removed crypto assets from its list of potential vulnerabilities to the U.S. financial stability in the 2025 report. The report now emphasizes sustainable economic growth as a crucial component of financial stability. 

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who chairs the FSOC, said that monitoring vulnerabilities alone is insufficient for financial stability; instead, sustainable long-term economic growth and economic security are interdependent with stability. The 2025 FSOC report eliminated the term “vulnerabilities” from its table of contents and reduced emphasis on identifying the systemic dangers of digital assets. 

FSOC says the GENIUS Act laid the foundation for crypto regulation

The 2025 FSOC report highlighted the GENIUS Act as the legislation that established the federal framework for regulating stablecoin payments. The law requires 100% reserve disclosures and oversight by agencies, including the Federal Reserve, the Office of the Controller of the Budget, and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. 

The Trump administration has maintained a pro-crypto stance, urging regulators to withdraw previous broad warnings to financial institutions regarding their engagement with crypto-related activities. The GENIUS Act, signed into law in July by the President, now positions compliant stablecoins to support the U.S dollar’s role in the international financial system. According to the FSOC 2025 report, continued use of dollar-denominated stablecoins will reinforce the dollar position in global economic systems. 

Meanwhile, the 2025 FSOC report avoids flagging explicit vulnerabilities such as potential contagion from stablecoins or spot market connections. This is in contrast to the 2024 FSOC report, which had recommended congressional approval on stablecoin regulation and spot markets. The 2025 report’s digital assets section has included a ‘further actions’ subsection that references the President’s Working Group report on U.S. crypto activity and the administration’s agenda to enable innovation and American leadership in digital financial technologies. 

President Donald Trump issued an Executive Order 14178 in January, revoking Biden’s directive. The order introduced responsible growth of digital assets, while prohibiting the issuance of a central bank digital currency. Other regulatory steps highlighted in 2025 include the Securities and Exchange Commission’s rescission of Staff Accounting Bulletin 121 via SAB 122, which removes the balance-sheet liability requirements for custodial crypto assets. 

EU warns that stablecoins pose a financial systemic failure risk if unmanaged

The OCC issued guidance earlier this year authorizing banks to conduct specific crypto transactions and granted preliminary trust charters to firms such as Circle, Ripple, Paxos, BitGo, and Fidelity Digital Assets. The 2025 report has encouraged institutional growth, especially in spot Bitcoin and Ethereum exchange-traded funds and tokenization assets. Such markets and institutions performed well in 2025. 

According to the 2025 FSOC report, illicit finance may be facilitated by stablecoins; however, most on-chain activities are transparent and legitimate. The report calls for continued enforcement without blocking lawful use cases of crypto assets. It also encourages ongoing regulatory developments across custody, anti-money laundering obligations, and the use of blockchain. Current frameworks such as the GENIUS Act allow for managed participation in the digital assets ecosystem. 

Globally, the Financial Stability Board and the Financial Action Task Force have shown concerns over fragmented oversight and illicit flows. For instance, European regulators have warned of the systemic risks posed by stablecoins. According to a Cryptopolitan report, Pierre Gramegna, the managing director of the European Stability Mechanism, cautioned in October that stablecoins could endanger global financial stability if left unregulated. Gramegna urged stablecoins to be tied to central bank money before gaining mainstream adoption to avoid the risk of the entire financial system collapsing, not just in Europe. 

The UK has also signaled that it will regulate crypto assets from 2027, aligning with the U.S. approach. The UK Financial Conduct Authority has called for Keir Starmer, UK Prime Minister, to prioritize stablecoin regulation. 

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Bitcoin has dropped back below $88,000 after rolling over from $90,500, with price still trading under the 100-hour Simple Moving Average. The sell-off found a floor at $85,151, and BTC is now consolidating near that base, but rebounds are facing pressure from a bearish trend line around $89,000. Bulls need to retake $88,000–$89,000 to ease downside risk; failure to do so keeps $85,500–$85,000 and then $83,500 in play, with $80,000 as the deeper “line in the sand.” Bitcoin (BTC) is back in damage-control mode after a sharp pullback wiped out recent gains. The price failed to reclaim the $90,000–$90,500 band, rolled over, and slid through $88,500 before briefly dipping under $87,000. Buyers did show up around $85,000, but the rebound so far looks more like stabilization than a clear trend reversal. Bitcoin dips hard, finds a bid near $85,000(h3) BTC’s latest move lower began when it couldn’t build follow-through above $90,000 and $90,500. Once that upside stalled, sellers took control and pushed price down through $88,500. The slide accelerated enough to spike below $87,000, but the market didn’t free-fall. Bulls defended the $85,000 zone, printing a low at $85,151. Since then, Bitcoin has been consolidating below the 23.6% Fibonacci retracement of the drop from the $93,560 swing high to the $85,151 low — a clue that the bounce is still shallow and that sellers haven’t fully backed off yet. Structurally, BTC is still on the back foot: It’s trading below $88,000, and It remains below the 100-hour Simple Moving Average, keeping short-term trend pressure pointed downward. Resistance is layered, and $89,000 is the problem area(h3) If bulls try to turn this into a recovery, they’ll have to climb through multiple ceilings in quick succession. First, BTC faces resistance around $87,150, followed by a more meaningful barrier near $87,500. From there, the market’s attention snaps back to $88,000 — the level BTC just lost and now needs to reclaim. A close back above $88,000 would improve the tone, but it doesn’t solve the bigger issue: there’s a bearish trend line on the hourly BTC/USD chart (Kraken feed) with resistance near $89,000, which also lines up with the next technical hurdle. If BTC can push through $89,000 and hold, the rebound could extend toward $90,000, with follow-through targets at $91,000 and $91,500. But until price clears that $88,000–$89,000 zone, rallies are at risk of being sold rather than chased. If BTC fails to reclaim resistance, the downside path is clear(h3) The near-term bear case is simple: if Bitcoin can’t climb back above the $87,000 area and keep traction, sellers may attempt another leg lower. Support levels line up like this: Immediate support: $85,500 First major support: $85,000 Next support: $83,500 Then $82,500 in the near term Below that, the major “don’t break this” level is still $80,000. If BTC slips under $80,000, the risk of acceleration to the downside increases significantly — not because it’s magic, but because it’s the kind of psychological and structural level that tends to trigger forced de-risking. Indicators: momentum still leans bearish(h3) The intraday indicators aren’t offering much comfort yet: Hourly MACD is losing pace in the bearish zone. Hourly RSI remains below 50, suggesting sellers still have the upper hand on short timeframes. So while the $85,000 defense held for now, the market hasn’t flipped bullish — it’s just stopped bleeding.
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