Paradigm has challenged the FDIC’s proposed stablecoin rules, warning against a broader yield ban. The firm says the GENIUS Act limits issuers, not independent third-party platforms. The letter adds pressure as Congress weighs the CLARITY Act and wider crypto market rules. Paradigm Challenges FDIC Stablecoin Yield Plan Paradigm told the U.S. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation that its proposal exceeds the GENIUS Act. The firm said the law does not allow the agency to restrict third-party stablecoin rewards. It also argued that Congress rejected similar restrictions during earlier legislative talks. The GENIUS Act bars stablecoin issuers from paying yield directly to holders. However, Paradigm said that the rule does not apply to exchanges or other outside firms. Therefore, the FDIC should not treat third-party rewards as automatic violations. The firm urged the FDIC to remove language that expands the act beyond its text. It also asked the agency to match limits proposed by the OCC...
The United Kingdom has sanctioned Huobi Global S.A., the Panama-based company behind the HTX exchange, amid allegations of providing financial support to Russia-linked networks. The move has sparked a lively debate among blockchain researchers and industry observers, who warn that broad sanctions could ripple across the crypto compliance fabric and disrupt established practices for curbing illicit activity in DeFi and beyond. Regulators asserted there were reasonable grounds to suspect HTX had supported Russia’s government through financial services and funds routed via sanctioned entities A7 Limited Liability Company and Garantex. HTX has rejected the characterization, insisting that the sanctioned entity is not the exchange itself. Amid the sanctions discourse, researchers highlighted potential collateral damage to the industry’s risk governance. Galaxy Digital’s Alex Thorn suggested that the scope of the sanctions—covering “all of HTX”—could affect legitimate users and complicate st...