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Policy

U.S. Stablecoin Proposal Targets Issuers, Not Wallet-to-Wallet Transfers

The U.S. Treasury, Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, and Office of Foreign Assets Control have jointly proposed a rule that would impose anti-money-laundering and sanctions compliance obl

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
June 18, 2026
5 min read
NEWS
U.S. Stablecoin Proposal Targets Issuers, Not Wallet-to-Wallet Transfers
CryptoCompass editorial visual for policy coverage.

The U.S. Treasury, Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, and Office of Foreign Assets Control have jointly proposed a rule that would impose anti-money-laundering and sanctions compliance obligations on stablecoin issuers, while explicitly declining to require those issuers to independently monitor wallet-to-wallet transfers on the secondary market.

The proposed rule, published in the Federal Register on April 10, 2026 as 91 FR 18582, implements the GENIUS Act by classifying permitted payment stablecoin issuers (PPSIs) as financial institutions under the Bank Secrecy Act. The GENIUS Act was signed into law on July 18, 2025.

The distinction between issuer-level obligations and secondary-market activity sits at the center of the proposal. Understanding what that line means in practice is critical for stablecoin companies, wallet providers, and everyday crypto users.

What the Proposal Requires of Issuers, and Where It Draws the Line

Under the proposed rule, PPSIs would be required to maintain full AML/CFT and sanctions compliance programs. That includes suspicious activity reporting, customer due diligence, and beneficial-ownership reporting for their direct counterparties in primary-market issuance and redemption.

A stablecoin issuer, in this context, is any entity permitted under the GENIUS Act to create and manage dollar-pegged tokens, control reserve backing, and process redemptions. Wallet-to-wallet transfers, by contrast, are peer-to-peer movements of stablecoins between self-hosted or custodial wallets that do not involve the issuer as a direct party.

The rule explicitly defines "secondary-market activity" as payment stablecoin activity that does not directly involve the issuer as a party other than via a smart contract. Self-hosted-wallet payments and person-to-person transfers are listed as examples of this secondary-market activity.

The proposal states it would not impose a standalone, independent obligation on an issuer to monitor secondary-market transactions. Compliance duties center on the issuer's own operations, not on every downstream wallet transfer.

However, the distinction is not absolute. Secondary-market activity may still inform an issuer's customer risk profiling. As Sullivan & Cromwell noted in their analysis, block, freeze, reject, and lawful-order capabilities proposed under the rule can extend to secondary-market activity even though SAR and due-diligence obligations do not.

Tether alone carries a market capitalization of $186.04 billion, illustrating the scale of the stablecoin ecosystem that this issuer-focused framework would govern.

USDT Market Cap $186.04B Tether's market capitalization shows the scale of the stablecoin market behind the proposal's issuer-focused compliance framework.

Why Issuer-Focused Rules Carry More Weight Than Transfer-Level Controls

By concentrating compliance at the issuer level, the proposal targets the entities that create, back, and redeem dollar-pegged tokens. Issuers control reserve management, redemption access, and the on-ramps through which stablecoins enter circulation.

DLA Piper confirmed in its practitioner analysis that the proposed changes primarily apply to a PPSI's relationship with direct counterparties and do not impose monitoring requirements on secondary-market transactions. This narrower scope avoids placing surveillance duties on every peer-to-peer stablecoin payment.

That said, the framing that wallet-to-wallet transfers are entirely outside the proposal's reach overstates the carveout. The official texts require issuers to maintain block, freeze, and reject capabilities that can reach secondary-market tokens when a lawful order demands it. The rule is narrower than blanket transfer monitoring, but it is not a full exemption.

Daily USDT trading volume of $59.51 billion shows how much stablecoin activity occurs on the secondary market, the segment where the proposed rule does not create a standalone issuer monitoring duty.

USDT 24-Hour Volume $59.51B Daily trading volume highlights how much stablecoin activity can occur in the secondary market even when the proposed rule does not create a standalone issuer duty to monitor each wallet-to-wallet transfer.

The regulatory approach also has implications for stablecoin product strategy. Issuers like Tether, which recently sunsetted its Alloy platform and gold-backed aUSD€ token, must now evaluate how new compliance programs interact with product decisions around issuance, reserves, and redemption access.

What Crypto Users, Wallet Providers, and Markets Should Watch

The comment period for the proposed rule closed on June 9, 2026, with 89 comments logged in the Federal Register. Treasury has also indicated that customer identification program requirements will be addressed in a separate rulemaking.

For users, the immediate question is whether their ability to send stablecoins between self-hosted wallets will change. Based on the current proposal, issuers would not be required to monitor those transfers independently. But issuers would need to maintain the technical ability to block or freeze tokens if compelled by a lawful order.

Wallet providers and exchanges, even though they are not the direct targets of this rule, will likely need to track how issuer-level compliance reshapes token availability. If an issuer's compliance program flags certain addresses or jurisdictions, downstream access could narrow without any separate regulation of the wallet layer.

The broader regulatory environment for crypto continues to evolve in parallel. The CME's challenge to the CFTC over Kalshi Bitcoin perps approval highlights ongoing jurisdictional tensions, while events like the World Datacentre Summit Philippines 2026 reflect the global infrastructure buildout underpinning digital asset markets.

The final rule's scope, effective date, and any modifications based on public comments have not yet been announced. The proposal's primary-versus-secondary market distinction remains the key framework for understanding which stablecoin activities face new federal compliance requirements and which do not.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.

Bitcoininfonews first published the article titled U.S. Stablecoin Proposal Targets Issuers, Not Wallet-to-Wallet Transfers.