FDIC rejects deposit insurance request tied to stablecoin holdings

Source Cryptopolitan

Stablecoin users in the United States may soon face a stark regulatory reality: their digital dollars will not enjoy the same federal safety net as bank deposits.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) has signaled that holders of payment stablecoins will not be eligible for federal deposit insurance, even if the assets are backed by funds held in insured banks.

According to FDIC Chair Travis Hill, the agency will issue a regulation to make the rule official, as the GENIUS Act clearly bans marketing stablecoins as insured by the US government. He said that stablecoin insurance could increase risk to the FDIC’s Deposit Insurance Fund by altering how the banking system distributes deposits. 

Stablecoins are excluded from pass-through insurance

Pass-through insurance covers any deposit made by a customer through a third-party, such as a fintech company, a broker, or a prepaid card service. However, the GENIUS Act states that the government doesn’t guarantee stablecoins because they aren’t traditional bank deposits, so the coins can’t receive any kind of protection from FDIC insurance.

The FDIC said adding stablecoin could put more pressure on its deposit insurance fund and create confusion about who is really insured, since the fund only protects ordinary bank deposits.

Another reason stablecoins can’t receive pass-through insurance is that it’s difficult to track the identities of their owners, especially in most systems today, making it hard for the FDIC to know who should receive coverage.

If stablecoins were to receive coverage, they might look more attractive than regular bank deposits, prompting account holders to move most of their money into digital coins without much caution. If this happens, the FDIC will face sudden market changes, as stablecoin companies might hold more funds in FDIC-insured accounts.

To prevent confusion, the FDIC plans to establish clear rules stating that stablecoins are not federally insured.

However, tokenized deposits are eligible for FDIC insurance because the law treats them the same way as traditional bank accounts, even though insurers use new technologies to track the money. 

Hill holds that deposits should not lose their legal status simply because they move from traditional banking platforms to a tokenized form. As he puts it, “a deposit is a deposit.”

Tokenized deposits typically function as digital tokens that represent a direct claim on funds held at a bank. This distinguishes them from stablecoins, which are usually pegged to a fiat currency but are not automatically linked to federally insured deposit accounts.

Banks are changing their rules

Apart from stablecoins, the FDIC and other banking regulators want to help banks manage real risks, protect customers, and support growth through reforms in supervision, capital, and liquidity.

Regulators want to change how they handle bank exams, from focusing on paperwork, policies, and procedures to looking into violations of the law or malpractice by the bank. The exams will focus on actual harm to customers in consumer compliance, and regulators will target exams on products that matter most to the business rather than asking a broad list of questions.

To ensure only the most serious violations count for significant enforcement, the FDIC will raise the threshold from the current $10,000 limit.

Regulators also make capital reforms to encourage more lending, create fairness between large and small banks, and make the banking system safer for everyone. To do this, regulators plan to issue a new proposal to remove overly strict risk weights on mortgages and retail loans (gold-plating). Another proposal will address risk sensitivity for mortgage, consumer, and corporate lending. 

When calculating liquidity, regulators want to allow banks to count their ability to borrow from the Federal Reserve because the 2023 bank failures proved that the 30-day Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR) doesn’t consider how quickly deposits can leave a bank. 

FDIC also wants to better understand risks and make smarter rules in the future by studying how depositors behave during crises.

The FDIC also wants to resolve failed banks in the future by lifting a 2009 policy that barred private investors from buying failed banks. Similarly, the agency plans to reduce the cost to the Deposit Insurance Fund through an emergency “shelf charter” procedure that allows non-bank investors to obtain a temporary bank charter without delay.

Don’t just read crypto news. Understand it. Subscribe to our newsletter. It's free.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
placeholder
Natural Gas sinks to pivotal level as China’s demand slumpsNatural Gas price (XNG/USD) edges lower and sinks to $2.56 on Monday, extending its losing streak for the fifth day in a row. The move comes on the back of China cutting its Liquified Natural Gas (LNG) imports after prices rose above $3.0 in June. It
Author  FXStreet
Jul 01, 2024
Natural Gas price (XNG/USD) edges lower and sinks to $2.56 on Monday, extending its losing streak for the fifth day in a row. The move comes on the back of China cutting its Liquified Natural Gas (LNG) imports after prices rose above $3.0 in June. It
placeholder
Pi Network Price Annual Forecast: PI Heads Into a Volatile 2026 as Utility Questions Collide With Big UnlocksPi Network heads into 2026 after a 90%+ 2025 drawdown from $3.00, with 17.5 million KYC users and a smart-contract-focused Stellar v23 upgrade offering upside potential, but 1.21 billion tokens unlocking and heavy exchange deposits (437 million PI) keeping supply pressure and trust risks firmly in focus.
Author  Mitrade
Dec 19, 2025
Pi Network heads into 2026 after a 90%+ 2025 drawdown from $3.00, with 17.5 million KYC users and a smart-contract-focused Stellar v23 upgrade offering upside potential, but 1.21 billion tokens unlocking and heavy exchange deposits (437 million PI) keeping supply pressure and trust risks firmly in focus.
placeholder
ECB Policy Outlook for 2026: What It Could Mean for the Euro’s Next MoveWith the ECB likely holding rates steady at 2.15% and the Fed potentially extending cuts into 2026, EUR/USD may test 1.20 if Eurozone growth proves resilient, but weaker growth and an ECB pivot could pull the pair back toward 1.13 and potentially 1.10.
Author  Mitrade
Dec 26, 2025
With the ECB likely holding rates steady at 2.15% and the Fed potentially extending cuts into 2026, EUR/USD may test 1.20 if Eurozone growth proves resilient, but weaker growth and an ECB pivot could pull the pair back toward 1.13 and potentially 1.10.
placeholder
My Top 5 Stock Market Predictions for 2026Five 2026 market predictions written in a native, news-style voice: AI’s winners and losers, broader sector leadership, dividend demand, valuation cooling as the Shiller CAPE sits at 39 (Dec. 31, 2025), and quantum-computing bursts—while keeping all original facts and numbers unchanged.
Author  Mitrade
Jan 06, Tue
Five 2026 market predictions written in a native, news-style voice: AI’s winners and losers, broader sector leadership, dividend demand, valuation cooling as the Shiller CAPE sits at 39 (Dec. 31, 2025), and quantum-computing bursts—while keeping all original facts and numbers unchanged.
placeholder
WTI recovers to near $86.50 as Strait of Hormuz remains closedWest Texas Intermediate (WTI), the US crude oil benchmark, is trading around $86.40 during the early Asian trading hours on Tuesday. The WTI price faces extreme volatility following a massive spike to nearly $120 per barrel in the previous session. 
Author  FXStreet
Mar 10, Tue
West Texas Intermediate (WTI), the US crude oil benchmark, is trading around $86.40 during the early Asian trading hours on Tuesday. The WTI price faces extreme volatility following a massive spike to nearly $120 per barrel in the previous session. 
goTop
quote