On April 1, the Conference of State Bank Supervisors (CSBS) submitted a letter to the House Financial Services Committee expressing concerns with an introduced draft of H.R. 2392—the Stablecoin Transparency and Accountability for a Better Ledger Economy (STABLE) Act of 2025 (the “Act”)—which purports to establish a comprehensive regulatory framework for payment stablecoins in the U.S. In the letter, CSBS expresses support for the development of a national framework for payment stablecoin issuers (PSIs), while warning that the current draft would unnecessarily preempt state regulatory authority and introduce risks to consumer protection and financial stability.

CSBS contended that, as currently drafted, the Act would centralize excessive authority over the stablecoin industry in a single federal agency, likely the OCC, undermining the dual banking system. The letter also emphasized that states already regulate over $50 billion in stablecoin activity and called on Congress to retain the benefits of a cooperative federal-state oversight model.

The letter identified 5 key changes needed to preserve the United States’ longstanding cooperative federalism model for the banking system and mitigate related risk factors, including:

Putting It Into Practice: The CSBS’s opposition to certain provisions of the Act comes at a time when federal regulators are recalibrating their approach to digital assets (previously discussed herehere, and here). The letter underscores the friction between recent efforts to streamline federal oversight of digital assets and the longstanding state-led model for regulating money services firms. As Congress debates a national framework for stablecoins, financial institutions should closely monitor these events as they unfold.

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