en
Back to the list

National Credit Union Administration proposes stablecoin issuer standards

source-logo  cryptobriefing.com 1 h
image

Credit unions, those member-owned financial cooperatives that most people associate with auto loans and slightly better savings rates, are about to get a shot at issuing stablecoins. The National Credit Union Administration has proposed a new rule establishing operational and risk-management standards for credit union-affiliated stablecoin issuers, marking one of the most concrete steps yet in bringing traditional cooperative finance into the digital asset ecosystem.

The proposal builds on the $GENIUS Act, which President Trump signed into law on July 18, 2025, creating the first comprehensive federal framework for payment stablecoins in the US. Under that legislation, the NCUA is tasked with overseeing credit unions that want to become what the law calls “permitted payment stablecoin issuers,” or PPSIs.

Advertisement

What the proposed rule actually covers

The NCUA’s latest proposal focuses specifically on the operational guardrails and risk-management requirements that any NCUA-licensed PPSI would need to meet. This isn’t the first piece of the puzzle. Back on February 11, 2026, the agency published a separate proposed rule detailing the licensing framework, essentially the application process for credit unions that want to get into the stablecoin business.

The comment period for the proposed rule runs through July 17, 2026, giving industry participants, credit union members, and the general public a window to weigh in before anything becomes final.

Under the $GENIUS Act, the NCUA is mandated to collaborate with the US Department of the Treasury and other regulators that oversee payment stablecoins.

Why credit unions want in

Credit unions have watched banks, fintech companies, and crypto-native firms stake out territory in the stablecoin space for years. NCUA Chairman Kyle Hauptman has been clear about the agency’s motivation: maintaining competitive parity for credit unions compared to other entities that can issue or facilitate stablecoins.

The competitive angle cuts both ways, though. Credit unions generally operate with smaller balance sheets and leaner technology budgets than major banks. Meeting the operational and risk-management standards the NCUA is proposing will require investment in compliance infrastructure, reserve management systems, and cybersecurity capabilities that some smaller institutions may find daunting.

cryptobriefing.com