One year after the GENIUS Act became law, the US stablecoin market holds roughly $310 billion, and the rulebook that once looked like a constraint has quietly become a sales engine. For traders, the shift matters because stablecoins are the plumbing of every position — the clearer the rules, the deeper and more reliable that plumbing becomes.
What Happened
Signed on July 18, 2025, the GENIUS Act created a federal framework for payment stablecoins. The core requirements are straightforward: one-for-one backing with liquid reserves, clear redemption rights for holders, and monthly disclosures of what sits behind each token. In effect, it turned “trust us” into “here are the receipts.”
Twelve months on, the market has concentrated around the largest issuers. Tether’s USDT accounts for roughly $184 billion and Circle’s USDC for about $73 billion, together making up the bulk of supply. The anniversary framing from analysts is blunt: the law did not just legitimize stablecoins, it made them easier to distribute and sell through regulated channels.
With federal guardrails in place, banks, fintechs, and payment platforms have more cover to offer dollar-tokens to customers without wondering whether the ground will shift beneath them. Compliance became a feature to market rather than a risk to hide.
What It Means for Traders
Stablecoins are how most traders sit in cash without leaving crypto. Deeper, better-regulated supply generally means tighter spreads, smoother on- and off-ramps, and fewer white-knuckle moments about whether a token will hold its peg during stress.
Concentration cuts both ways, though. When two issuers dominate supply, their reserve quality and redemption mechanics become systemically important to the whole market. Monthly disclosures give traders a real tool here — reserve composition and redemption terms are now checkable facts, not marketing claims.
It also pays to watch where the regulatory lines fall. Recent debates over which tokens qualify for protections show that not all stablecoins are treated equally, a theme we covered when Washington limited deposit insurance to bank-issued tokens.
The Bigger Picture
A regulated US stablecoin framework is a magnet for the rest of the world. It sets a template other jurisdictions now respond to, whether by competing, copying, or pushing back — as seen in moves like China tightening stablecoin scrutiny and national experiments such as Georgia putting its currency on private stablecoin rails.
The strategic prize is dollar reach. Every compliant dollar-token issued abroad extends US monetary influence into wallets that may never touch a traditional bank. That is a powerful and slightly double-edged outcome, and it explains why stablecoin policy now sits close to the center of financial diplomacy.
A year in, the GENIUS Act has done more than tidy up a corner of crypto — it has helped turn stablecoins into mainstream financial infrastructure. For traders, that means the tokens sitting in your account are increasingly backed by disclosed reserves and defined rights, and increasingly central to how global money moves. Watching how supply, reserves, and regulation evolve from here is simply part of reading the market.
This article is informational only and does not constitute financial advice.




















