Regulation & Policy
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The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has quietly implemented one of its most market-friendly moves in the cryptocurrency space to date, reducing the capital “haircut” on payment stablecoins held by broker-dealers from 100% to just 2%.
In practical terms, this means that $100 of approved stablecoins now counts as $98 toward a firm’s net capital, effectively aligning them with conservative money market funds. This adjustment significantly improves the economics of on-chain settlement for regulated dealers.
In its recently updated FAQ from the Division of Trading and Markets, the SEC clarified that staff “would not object if a broker-dealer were to apply a 2% haircut on proprietary positions in a payment stablecoin when calculating its net capital”.
Commissioner Hester Peirce, a long-time advocate for practical rules around tokenization and settlement, described the change as a long-overdue correction. Previously, many firms assumed a 100% deduction, which made on-chain settlement uneconomic for regulated brokers and limited the operational use of stablecoins in securities workflows.
Legal experts and trading desks view this move as a direct continuation of last year’s GENIUS Act, which established reserve and oversight standards for payment stablecoin issuers. The law signaled that compliant stablecoins should be treated more like cash equivalents rather than complex derivatives.
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Professor Tonya Evans commented on X: “This is a big deal. Stablecoins are now treated like money market funds on a firm’s balance sheet”. Analysts argue that this guidance, combined with the SEC’s updated crypto FAQ allowing exchanges and alternative trading systems (ATSs) to pair crypto asset securities with non-securities such as Bitcoin, paves the way for deeper integration between traditional markets and on-chain liquidity.
The announcement arrives at a time when digital assets are showing maturing macro trends:
-Bitcoin trades near $68,100, with a 24-hour range of roughly $65,600–$68,300 on about $33 billion in volume.
-Ethereum (ETH) sits around $1,960, ranging from $1,914 to $1,980 on a $18 billion trading volume.
These movements reflect the role of digital assets as a gauge of macro risk appetite.
Policy watchers now expect the SEC’s haircut adjustment to influence upcoming debates over broader cryptocurrency market-structure regulations, including the CLARITY Act and two other major regulatory initiatives projected to emerge as early as this summer.
For broker-dealers, the message is clear: the SEC is signaling a willingness to allow stablecoins to operate within the regulated financial system, rather than forcing them to function at the periphery.




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