Live
Black Hat USADark ReadingBlack Hat AsiaAI BusinessHow to Use Shaders in React (2026 WebGPU / WebGL Tutorial)DEV CommunityThe 5th Agent Orchestration Pattern: Market-Based Task AllocationDEV CommunityThe Hidden Cost of Copy-Pasting Code Into ChatGPTDEV Community14-Package Monorepo: How We Structured WAIaaS for AI Agent BuildersDEV CommunityPromoting raw BG3 gameplay bundle previews in the TD2 SDL portDEV CommunityWhat Is New In Helm 4 And How It Improves Over Helm 3DEV CommunityDevelopers Are Designing for AI Before Users NowDEV CommunityStop Using Elaborate Personas: Research Shows They Degrade Claude Code OutputDEV CommunityAn Engineering-grade breakdown of RAG PipelineDEV CommunityUnlock the Power of Private AI: Build a Local RAG Pipeline with LangGraph, Ollama & Vector DatabasesDEV CommunityDeepSource for Python: Static Analysis and AutofixDEV CommunityI tried to destroy this AirTag alternative, but it wouldn't crack - unlike othersZDNet AIBlack Hat USADark ReadingBlack Hat AsiaAI BusinessHow to Use Shaders in React (2026 WebGPU / WebGL Tutorial)DEV CommunityThe 5th Agent Orchestration Pattern: Market-Based Task AllocationDEV CommunityThe Hidden Cost of Copy-Pasting Code Into ChatGPTDEV Community14-Package Monorepo: How We Structured WAIaaS for AI Agent BuildersDEV CommunityPromoting raw BG3 gameplay bundle previews in the TD2 SDL portDEV CommunityWhat Is New In Helm 4 And How It Improves Over Helm 3DEV CommunityDevelopers Are Designing for AI Before Users NowDEV CommunityStop Using Elaborate Personas: Research Shows They Degrade Claude Code OutputDEV CommunityAn Engineering-grade breakdown of RAG PipelineDEV CommunityUnlock the Power of Private AI: Build a Local RAG Pipeline with LangGraph, Ollama & Vector DatabasesDEV CommunityDeepSource for Python: Static Analysis and AutofixDEV CommunityI tried to destroy this AirTag alternative, but it wouldn't crack - unlike othersZDNet AI

Fed's Barr Says Stablecoins Need Tighter Controls to Fight Money Laundering

Decrypt AIby André BeganskiApril 1, 20261 min read0 views
Source Quiz

The Fed governor has previously said that stablecoins risk undermining the U.S. central bank’s credibility.

In brief

  • Fed Governor Michael Barr called on regulators to implement anti-money-laundering controls for stablecoins following last year’s passage of the GENIUS Act.

  • He identified stablecoins’ accessibility on “secondary markets” as a key area of concern, while global watchdogs have recently focussed on peer-to-peer transfers.

  • A U.S. Treasury report urged Congress this month to consider a law that would grant institutions legal protections for voluntarily freezing questionable digital assets.

Needing nothing more than a phone and internet connection to hold stablecoins may be a blessing for some, but that accessibility presents risks that regulators still need to address, according to Federal Reserve Governor Michael Barr.

When it comes to implementing rules and regulations under the GENIUS Act, Barr said at an event in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday that U.S. regulators will need adequate anti-money-laundering controls in order for stablecoins to reach their full potential.

“A key area of concern [...] is the potential for stablecoin use in money laundering or terrorist financing, since bad actors can purchase stablecoins in secondary markets that may not have customer identification requirements,” he said. “Both regulatory and technological solutions will need to be deployed to limit these risks.”

Barr’s remarks touched on financial stability risks that stablecoins may pose. Still, his focus on their accessibility cuts at a key functionality users have enjoyed for years, considering 66% of stablecoins are held by individuals in emerging markets where access to dollars can be costly or restricted, according to Goldman Sachs.

When it comes to the regulatory solutions, Barr’s comments likely refer to the Bank Secrecy Act, a law requiring financial institutions to assist government agencies in detecting and preventing illicit finance, Nicholas Anthony, a policy analyst at the Cato Institute, told Decrypt.

“On the technological front, it's a little bit tricky to speculate exactly what he means,” he said. “If I were to guess, I would imagine it's something about maybe deploying smart contracts to have automatic flags and freezes in concerning situations.”

Anthony underscored that uncertainty, noting that Barr’s call for anti-money-laundering controls could also involve streamlining existing surveillance processes.

Barr’s assessment follows the submission of a report to Congress from the U.S. Treasury Department this month, which found that many financial institutions are taking a proactive approach toward money-laundering risks with digital assets. That includes using AI algorithms to conduct sophisticated analysis of blockchain data despite a lack of standards, the agency found.

At the same time, intergovernmental agencies like the Financial Action Task Force have called on stablecoin issuers to implement technical measures to be able to block, freeze, and withdraw stablecoins at any time. The organization pointed to peer-to-peer transactions as a key vulnerability contributing to money laundering, terrorist financing, and sanctions evasion.

The report submitted by the Department suggested Congress should consider a “hold law,” which would provide institutions with legal protections for freezing digital assets suspected to be involved in illicit activity during “a short-term investigation.”

“Such a law would be particularly useful for countering illicit finance involving permitted payment stablecoins,” Treasury added.

Barr has at times expressed other concerns with stablecoins. In 2023, he signaled that stablecoins without federal oversight have the potential to undermine credibility in the U.S. central bank, which is recognized as the “ultimate source of credibility in money,” he said.

Barr said at the time that the Fed was “a long way” from determining whether the U.S. central bank would issue a central bank digital currency (CBDC). This month, the Senate passed a housing bill including a provision outlawing a CBDC in the U.S. until at least 2031.

Conservatives have long argued that a CBDC would empower the federal government to exert more control over everyday transactions, yet some states are crafting laws that expand their own power when it comes to policing stablecoin transactions.

A stablecoin bill that recently passed in Florida, for example, looped dollar-pegged tokens into the state’s existing rules to combat illicit finance. The provisions include transaction monitoring requirements and a $10,000 reporting threshold for transactions.

Daily Debrief Newsletter

Start every day with the top news stories right now, plus original features, a podcast, videos and more.

Was this article helpful?

Sign in to highlight and annotate this article

AI
Ask AI about this article
Powered by AI News Hub · full article context loaded
Ready

Conversation starters

Ask anything about this article…

Daily AI Digest

Get the top 5 AI stories delivered to your inbox every morning.

Knowledge Map

Knowledge Map
TopicsEntitiesSource
Fed's Barr …Decrypt AI

Connected Articles — Knowledge Graph

This article is connected to other articles through shared AI topics and tags.

Knowledge Graph100 articles · 179 connections
Scroll to zoom · drag to pan · click to open

Discussion

Sign in to join the discussion

No comments yet — be the first to share your thoughts!

More in Laws & Regulation