The New York Department of Financial Services is pursuing federal recognition of its stablecoin regulatory program under the GENIUS Act framework. Through newly proposed rules, DFS aims to demonstrate substantial equivalence with federal standards while retaining jurisdiction over qualified stablecoin issuers. The framework strengthens existing requirements around reserve management, redemption protocols, auditing standards, and operational risk controls.
Acting Superintendent Kaitlin Asrow unveiled the regulatory proposal from the New York State Department of Financial Services. The initiative expands upon previous DFS guidance from June 2022 governing dollar-pegged stablecoin operations. This update directly addresses federal certification pathways established by the GENIUS Act.
The proposed framework retains New York’s core requirements for reserve composition, token redeemability, and acceptable backing assets. DFS-licensed issuers would continue facing mandatory independent audit obligations. These foundational elements already constitute New York’s current approach to stablecoin regulation.
Yet the proposal introduces additional safeguards designed to satisfy federal benchmarks. The updated rules would cap reserve concentration with individual custodial institutions. Issuers would also need to implement structured risk management frameworks spanning critical operational functions.
New York seeks official designation that its regulatory structure substantially mirrors federal stablecoin requirements. Achieving this certification would permit qualifying issuers to continue operating under DFS jurisdiction. Absent such recognition, certain operators might transition to direct federal regulatory oversight.
The GENIUS Act establishes a bifurcated regulatory architecture for stablecoin supervision. Issuers with circulating tokens exceeding $10 billion come under federal regulatory authority. Smaller operators may continue under state supervision provided federal authorities certify those state programs.
A designated Stablecoin Certification Review Committee evaluates state regulatory frameworks under the legislation. This committee comprises officials from the Treasury Department, Federal Reserve, and FDIC. Consequently, New York must demonstrate regulatory parity with federal requirements.
The revised regulatory framework extends beyond reserve backing and redemption mechanics. Issuers would implement controls governing corporate governance structures, cybersecurity protocols, and internal audit functions. Risk management programs must address asset expansion, revenue generation, and third-party service provider relationships.
The draft regulations also establish standards for related-party transactions and affiliate arrangements. DFS indicated these enhancements support more robust supervision amid expanding stablecoin market activity. The department emphasized its framework draws upon empirical data, active supervision, and stakeholder input.
DFS has maintained regulatory oversight of stablecoin issuance since 2018. Its current framework encompasses reserve requirements, redemption guarantees, disclosure obligations, and restrictions on asset rehypothecation. The new proposal modernizes this structure for compatibility with the federal GENIUS Act regime.
The regulatory proposal initiates with a 10-day preliminary comment period. Following State Register publication, DFS will conduct a 60-day formal public comment period. Regulators will subsequently evaluate stakeholder input before issuing final rules.
DFS indicated the finalized regulation becomes operative alongside the GENIUS Act on January 18, 2027. Current DFS-licensed stablecoin issuers would benefit from a one-year transition window. Meanwhile, existing DFS stablecoin guidance continues governing licensed entities.
This proposal reflects broader collaborative efforts between DFS and fellow regulators. Recently, DFS executed a supervisory cooperation agreement with the European Banking Authority. This action underscored New York’s determination to preserve its prominent position in stablecoin regulatory oversight.
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