US Treasury Calls For Public Comment On GENIUS Stablecoin Bill

The US Treasury Department has issued a call for comments related to the passage of the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for US Stablecoins (GENIUS) Act, signed into law by President Donald Trump in July.

In a Monday notice, the Treasury said “interested individuals and organizations” could provide feedback to the government department on “innovative or novel methods, techniques, or strategies to detect and mitigate illicit finance risks involving digital assets.” Treasury officials said the call for comments by Oct. 17 was part of the requirements under the GENIUS Act.

In a Monday X post, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent called the move “essential” for implementing the law to “[secure] American leadership in digital assets.” After receiving comments from the public, the Treasury will research the methods proposed and submit reports to the Senate Banking Committee and House Financial Services Committee.

The bill to regulate payment stablecoins is expected to go into effect 18 months after it was signed into law on July 18 or 120 days after the US Treasury and Federal Reserve finalize regulations.

The timing of the implementation suggested that the bill, one of the first crypto-related laws passed under the Trump administration, would be less likely to be used as a campaign issue for candidates potentially running on crypto policies in the 2026 midterm elections.

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Among the potential uses for “illicit activity” for which Treasury requested comments was money laundering with crypto. The GENIUS Act also specified that the department seek feedback on application programming interfaces (APIs), AI, digital identity verification, and “use of blockchain technology and monitoring.”