Republican Senator Pat Toomey, who is set to retire from U.S. Congress at the end of the term, has used one of his last few weeks in office to introduce a new stablecoin bill, aimed at creating a regulatory framework for “payment stablecoins.”
Toomey — who also serves as the Ranking Member of the U.S. Banking Committee — said the Dec. 21 bill, called the Stablecoin TRUST Act of 2022 would serve as a framework for stablecoin regulation for his fellow senators who are looking to push out stablecoin legislation in 2023.
In a statement, the senator called stablecoins an “exciting technological development that could transform money and payments,” adding:
If passed by Congress, the bill would permit non-state and non-bank institutions to issue stablecoins, so long as they obtain a federal license that is created and issued by the U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) and that the stablecoins are backed up with “high-quality liquid assets.”
The stablecoin issuers must also comply with a new public disclosure standard, clearly outline redemption policies and provide regular attestations from authorized accounting firms.
The bill would exempt stablecoin issuers from U.S. securities laws, so long as they don’t offer interest-bearing products or services or otherwise act like an investment or advisory firm.
Investor protection is also well embedded into the bill, with it stating that in the event of an issuer’s insolvency, stablecoin holders will be the first to be reimbursed — which is perhaps the most notable difference between this bill and Toomey’s earlier bill that was introduced into Congress in Apr. 2022.
The bill would also only apply to “payment” stablecoins that can be directly converted to fiat by the issuer —
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