As the crypto world wraps up a pivotal week, one legislative move from the U.S. Congress is dominating headlines: the GENIUS Act. While it’s being celebrated as a major step toward regulatory clarity, industry leaders are quick to remind the community that this is just the starting line—not the finish.
What Is the GENIUS Act?
Short for Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for US Stablecoins, the GENIUS Act introduces the first comprehensive federal framework for stablecoins in the United States. With over 300 lawmakers in favor—including more than 100 Democrats—it’s a bipartisan signal that Washington is ready to take digital assets seriously.
Crucially, the legislation formally acknowledges that not all crypto assets are securities. This subtle but powerful distinction provides developers, investors, and institutions with a clearer legal pathway to innovate and grow.
A Green Light, Not a Green Checkmark
Leo Fan, co-founder of Cysic, sees the GENIUS Act as a “green light” for integration, rather than a stamp of approval. “It’s foundational,” Fan said, “but there’s still a long way to go.” He points to the need for scalable blockchain infrastructure, real-time verification systems, and reliable custody solutions for broader real-world adoption.
Fan believes that crypto is beginning to be seen as essential infrastructure, particularly in areas like finance, identity authentication, and privacy technologies. In his view, this legal shift clears the path for deeper integration into traditional systems—but only if the right technological and institutional support follows.
A Boost for DeFi’s Legitimacy
According to Altan Tutar, CEO of MoreMarkets, this is the strongest signal yet that DeFi is here to stay. He sees the act as a bridge between traditional finance and decentralized systems. Tokenization of real-world assets like gold or oil could soon become mainstream, and stablecoins could play a central role in enabling cross-border and asset-backed transactions.
However, Tutar also warns that regulatory clarity often favors institutions, not retail investors. He stresses the need for intuitive apps, reward models, and simplified tools that benefit everyday users—not just the crypto-native elite. Without these, the industry risks repeating its own version of the dot-com bubble.
Institutions Now Have a Roadmap
Ryan Chow, CEO of Solv Protocol, shares similar sentiments. He views the GENIUS Act as a long-overdue step toward legitimizing digital assets and removing barriers that have historically kept institutions at bay.
He praises the law for recognizing the difference between decentralized assets and traditional securities—a distinction he calls “monumental.” But Chow adds, “Clarity is necessary; credibility builds markets.” For the crypto sector to thrive, it must embrace models like Bitcoin-backed lending, tokenized government bonds, and yields based on real assets—with transparency and compliance baked in.
Beyond Regulation: Usability Is Key
Will K, co-founder of Symbiosis.Finance and CEO of VOOI, says legal frameworks are just one piece of the puzzle. For crypto to move from niche to global norm, it must focus on user-friendly interfaces, accessible onboarding, and AI-enhanced tools that simplify the experience.
“The industry can’t keep building just for crypto insiders,” Will K emphasized. “If we want true adoption, we need to build for everyone else.”
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