Some of the biggest American banks, including Jpmorgan Chase, Bank of America, Citigroup and Wells Fargo, explore a potential partnership to issue a shared stablecoin.
The Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday that the initiative, if it takes place, would mark a major stage of traditional financial institutions in the digital currency space, where crypto-native companies have so far led the charge.
Consortium talks would involve entities such as early alert services, the company behind Zelle, and the Clearing House, which operates a real -time payment system that many large banks use.
Although the discussions are always conceptual, the report indicates that banks weigh potential demand for stable co -backs with consortium, in parallel with imminent regulatory developments.
Legislators are closer to the definition of basic rules for the American digital payment tokens market
The renewal of interests occur while American legislators are progressing on a long -awaited regulatory framework. This week, the Senate has advanced the law on engineering, a bipartite bill which establishes surveillance rules for banks and non-banks issuing stablecoins.
The law presents reserve requirements, transparency standards and places issuers under the Bank Secrecy Act, aimed at promoting safer adoption while maintaining the world role of the US dollar.
The progress of the bill is considered to be a green light for the institutions which had previously been hesitant after the regulators served themselves on cryptographic activity in 2022. Bank leaders now consider stablescoins as a legitimate tool to modernize cross -border transfers, reduce transaction times and compete with digital offers from technology giants and crypto startups.
Banks weigh the entry of the stable reserve as
Stablecoins, generally one by one by one with fiduciary coins and supported by liquid reserves, are already at the heart of trading and cryptographic colonies. For banks, the issue of their own version could allow them to maintain control of payment infrastructure as digital dollars become more common.
A model under discussion could allow wider access, leaving the banks beyond the consortium to use stablecoin. Meanwhile, some small regional banks have launched the idea of a distinct Stablecoin initiative, although such an effort is probably confronted with scalability and regulatory obstacles.
The timing is crucial. With the administration of President Trump openly supporting digital finance and his family business launching his own stablecoin earlier this year, banks are under pressure to act. A clear legal framework could reshape the landscape, promoting compliant issuers and provoking a wave of innovation with inherited institutions.
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