Title 12 › Chapter 56— REGULATION OF PAYMENT STABLECOINS › § 5903
Permitted payment stablecoin issuers must keep one dollar of easy-to-use reserve for every payment stablecoin they have outstanding. Reserves can be U.S. cash or Federal Reserve balances, demand deposits at insured banks, short-term Treasury securities with 93 days or less to maturity, certain overnight repurchase and reverse-repurchase agreements backed by short-term Treasuries, money market fund shares that only hold those safe assets, other similar federal government assets approved by regulators, or tokenized versions of those assets if legal. Reserves may not be pledged or reused except to meet margin for allowed repos, provide standard custody services, or create liquidity to meet redemptions (with repo limits and clearing or regulator approval). Issuers must post a clear redemption policy and all fees (with at least 7 days’ notice before fee changes), publish monthly the number of coins and reserve makeup (including average maturity and custody location), have monthly reports reviewed by a registered accounting firm, and have the CEO and CFO certify the report to their regulator (false certifications carry criminal penalties under 18 U.S.C. 1350(c)). Issuers must follow tailored capital, liquidity, and risk rules set by regulators and must follow Bank Secrecy Act rules (AML, records, suspicious activity reports, sanctions controls, customer ID). Issuers may only issue, redeem, manage reserves, custody assets or keys, and related support activities. They cannot force customers to buy other products, claim U.S. government backing or deposit insurance, or pay interest or yield to holders just for holding the coin. Public companies with more than $50,000,000,000 outstanding need audited annual financials. Companies not mainly in finance, domestic or foreign, must get unanimous approval from the Stablecoin Certification Review Committee and meet strict data-use limits. State-regulated issuers under $10,000,000,000 may stay with similar state rules; larger ones must move to the federal framework within 360 days of crossing $10,000,000,000 or stop new issuance. People convicted of certain financial or cyber felonies cannot be officers or directors; violations carry fines (up to $500,000 or $1,000,000 in specified cases), possible prison time (up to 5 years), and other enforcement. Certain deadlines: Treasury and the Attorney General must report to Congress within 1 year after July 18, 2025, and the Stablecoin Certification Review Committee must issue an interpretive rule within 1 year after July 18, 2025.
Full Legal Text
Banks and Banking — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
12 U.S.C. § 5903
Title 12 — Banks and Banking
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60