27

February

2026

DLx News Alert: OCC Proposes Prudential Framework for Stablecoin Issuers Under the GENIUS Act

OCC Headquarters, credit to OCC

Read this DLx News Alert as a PDF.

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Friday, February 27, 2026

On February 25, 2026, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM)[1] that would establish a comprehensive prudential regulatory framework for payment stablecoin issuers under the GENIUS Act.[2] The proposed rule would formalize payment stablecoin issuance as a federally supervised financial activity and establish enforceable capital, liquidity, reserve, custody, and risk-management standards applicable to national banks, federal savings associations, and federally qualified nonbank issuers. The proposal is set to be published in the Federal Register on March 2, 2026, which will kick off a 60-day public comment period  before the OCC can promulgate the final rule.

The OCC’s proposed rule establishes the first substantive prudential standards under the GENIUS Act and provides the clearest indication to date of how federal supervisors intend to regulate payment stablecoin issuers. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation’s (FDIC) proposed rule in December 2025[3] addressed procedural requirements governing applications by insured depository institutions seeking approval to issue payment stablecoins through subsidiaries, but it did not establish ongoing supervisory standards applicable to issuers. Additional rulemakings from the Federal Reserve (Fed) and the National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) are expected as federal regulators continue working toward GENIUS’s statutory deadline of July 18, 2026, for issuing implementing regulations.[4] Once finalized, these interagency rules will establish the operative supervisory framework governing payment stablecoin issuance in the United States.

Industry participants and other interested stakeholders ought to strongly consider submitting comments by the end of April, especially if they are potentially concerned over outcomes of the OCC’s proposed characterizations of yield payments or thresholds for federal supervisory requirements or foreign issuers.

Prudential Framework

Under the proposed rule, the OCC would subject payment stablecoin issuers to capital and liquidity requirements tailored to that issuer’s risk profile, with supervisory expectations calibrated on a case-by-case basis through operational and risk-based standards rather than fixed quantitative metrics.[5] The OCC would evaluate prudential compliance through an issuer’s demonstrated ability to manage reserves and satisfy redemption obligations under varying conditions.[6] The proposed rule would require a permitted issuer to satisfy redemption requests within 2 business days under ordinary market conditions.[7] The proposed rule would automatically extend that redemption period to 7 days in periods when an issuer “faces redemption demands in excess of 10% of its outstanding issuance value in a single 24-hour period.”[8]

Yield Payments

The GENIUS Act prohibits stablecoin issuers from paying interest or yield on stablecoins,[9] but uncertainty has remained as to whether rewards programs, rebates, or affiliated payment arrangements may constitute prohibited yield in economic substance.[10] The OCC’s proposal addresses these concerns by focusing on the economic substance of payments made to stablecoin holders rather than their formal characterization. The proposal establishes a rebuttable presumption that payments arising from arrangements closely connected to an issuer’s payment activities or involving contractual or control relationships with affiliated parties constitute prohibited interest or yield.[11] Issuers may attempt to rebut this presumption by demonstrating that the relevant arrangement does not function as a substitute for interest payments and is not designed to evade the GENIUS Act’s statutory prohibition.[12] The OCC’s proposal explains that arrangements outside the presumption remain subject to supervisory review on a case-by-case basis, but that independent merchant discounts and profit sharing with non-affiliate partners in white label arrangements are not, on their own, treated as prohibited yield.[13]

Required Conversion to Federal Supervision

Section 4(d)(2) of the GENIUS Act requires state-supervised stablecoin issuers with an outstanding stablecoin issuance of more than $10 billion to transition to federal oversight, and the OCC’s NPRM outlines how that statutory transition would be implemented. Specifically, the proposed rule establishes transition procedures requiring these formerly state-supervised issuers to notify the OCC upon exceeding the statutory threshold, submit supervisory information demonstrating their ability to operate under federal supervision, certify compliance with the federal regulatory framework (or provide a remediation plan), and undergo an initial OCC examination following transition.[14]

Foreign Issuers

The proposed rule also addresses the treatment of foreign payment stablecoin issuers offering payment stablecoins to U.S. persons, requiring foreign issuers to register with the OCC and comply with applicable prudential standards as a condition of accessing U.S. markets.[15] The proposed rule would also require foreign issuers to maintain required reserves at United States financial institutions sufficient to support redemption obligations for U.S. customers.[16] The proposed rule does not establish detailed Bank Secrecy Act or sanctions compliance procedures, instead indicating that those requirements will be addressed through separate Treasury-coordinated rulemaking.[17]

The proposed rule remains subject to public comment and revision prior to adoption as a final rule, and additional interagency rulemakings are expected to further develop the GENIUS Act’s regulatory framework.

Feel free to contact the DLx Law team with any questions you might have.

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[1] Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, OCC Requests Comments on Proposal to Implement GENIUS Act, News Release 2026-9 (Feb. 25, 2026), https://occ.gov/news-issuances/news-releases/2026/nr-occ-2026-9.html; Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Implementing the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act for the Issuance of Stablecoins by Entities Subject to the Jurisdiction of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (Feb. 25, 2026), https://occ.gov/news-issuances/news-releases/2026/nr-occ-2026-9a.pdf [hereinafter OCC NPRM].

[2] Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act, Pub. L. No. 119-27, 139 Stat. 419 (2025), available at https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/senate-bill/1582/text [hereinafter GENIUS Act].

[3] Approval Requirements for Issuance of Payment Stablecoins by Subsidiaries of FDIC-Supervised Insured Depository Institutions, 90 Fed. Reg. 59409 (proposed Dec. 19, 2025), available at https://www.fdic.gov/board/federal-register-notice-approval-requirements-issuance-payment-stablecoins-subsidiaries-fdic.

[4] See GENIUS Act § 13(a).

[5] OCC NPRM at 46-48.

[6] Id. (requiring issuers to demonstrate the operational capability to access and monetize reserve assets on short notice in order to satisfy redemption requests).

[7] See OCC NPRM at 60.

[8] Id.

[9] See GENIUS Act § 4(a)(11).

[10] The debate about these arrangements has prompted significant pushback from the banking lobby and complicated congressional consideration of the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act of 2025 (the “CLARITY Act”). See, e.g., American Bankers Association, Close the Payment of Interest Loophole, Letter to the United States Senate (Jan. 14, 2026), https://www.aba.com/advocacy/policy-analysis/close-payment-of-interest-loophole-letter (arguing that incentive payments routed through affiliates may evade statutory prohibitions on interest and enable stablecoins to operate as deposit substitutes); Jesse Hamilton, Latest White House Talks on Stablecoin Yield Make Progress With Banks, No Deal Yet,  CoinDesk (Feb. 19, 2026), https://www.coindesk.com/policy/2026/02/19/latest-white-house-talks-on-stablecoin-yield-make-progress-with-banks-no-deal-yet (reporting that banking groups argued stablecoin rewards threaten traditional deposits and pushed for restrictions during negotiations around the CLARITY Act).

[11] OCC NPRM at 37-39.

[12] Id. at 39.

[13] Id. at 40.

[14] Id. at 82-89.

[15] OCC NPRM at 106.

[16] Id.

[17] Id. at 71.


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Amil Malik

Amil assists with various client matters in connection with digital assets and the adoption of blockchain technology, including general corporate law, securities law, and financial services regulation. She joined DLx Law after receiving her J.D. from the George Washington University School of Law, where much of her studies focused on national security and cybersecurity law.

Amil received her B.B.A./B.A. with high honors from the University of Texas at Austin. Between university and law school, Amil worked as a mergers and acquisitions analyst in New York, where she performed financial valuations and analysis as part of advisory services provided to sell-side and buy-side clients across media, consumer, technology, shipping, and financial technology industries. Amil is licensed to practice law in the District of Columbia.

Tom Momberg

+17186645458 tom.momberg@dlxlaw.com

Tom advises clients in an array of matters related to blockchain technology, decentralized finance, banking and payments systems, financial products, and financial technology applications. He joined DLx Law as an attorney after working as in-house counsel for a payments and banking software service provider, advising on various legal and regulatory matters, operations, risk, customer due diligence, and corporate best practices.

Tom received his J.D. from George Mason University Law School in Virginia and his B.A. from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Tom is a former journalist, and, while in law school, he interned for DLx Law and served as a law clerk for several federal institutions in Washington, D.C., including the CFTC, FCC, and House Judiciary Committee. Tom is admitted to practice law in the District of Columbia and the State of Oregon.

Sarah Chen

+19296345691 sarah.chen@dlxlaw.com

Sarah advises clients in all matters related to the adoption of blockchain technology, including general corporate, venture financing, securities laws and financial regulatory. Prior to joining DLx Law, Sarah was a senior associate in the M&A group of an international law firm headquartered in New York City, advising public companies and private equity firms on mergers, acquisitions, and other corporate transactions.

Sarah received her B.A. from New York University, magna cum laude, and her J.D. from Columbia Law School where she was a James Kent Scholar. During law school, Sarah also served as a judicial extern to the Hon. Debra Ann Livingston of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Sarah is licensed to practice law in the State of New York.

Gregory Strong

+3027665535 greg.strong@dlxlaw.com

Greg focuses on advising entities regarding legal issues associated with the adoption of blockchain technology. Prior to joining DLx Law, Greg was a Deputy Attorney General in the Delaware Department of Justice. He served as the Director of the Investor Protection Unit for three years and was responsible for administering and enforcing the provisions of the Delaware Securities Act. Prior to his appointment as Director of the Investor Protection Unit, Greg was the Director of the Consumer Protection Unit for three years.

Greg has successfully represented the State of Delaware in many complex civil enforcement matters alleging violations of Delaware investor and consumer protection statutes and has extensive litigation experience. Greg graduated from Lehigh University with a B.S. in Finance and received his J.D./M.B.A. from Temple University.

Angela Angelovska-Wilson

+12023651448 angela@dlxlaw.com

Angela is an early distributed ledger technology adopter and a leading authority in the evolving global legal and regulatory landscape surrounding distributed ledger technology and smart contracts. Prior to co-founding DLx Law, Angela served as the Chief Legal & Compliance Officer of Digital Asset and was part of the founding team.

Prior to joining Digital Asset, Angela was a partner at Reed Smith where she regularly advised clients on the implementation of new technologies to finance and the complex regulatory schemes involved in the development, creation, marketing, sale and servicing of various financial services and products. Before Reed Smith, Angela spent most of her career in various roles at Latham & Watkins, where she was recognized by The Legal 500 US among the top finance attorneys in the U.S.

Angela has a deep understanding of the Fin-Tech industry and in particular the distributed ledger industry, having been involved in a number of startups in various roles, as an employee, entrepreneur and advisor. In addition to DLx Law, Angela is also co-founder of Sila Inc., an innovative technology company.