GAO Presses FDIC On Crypto And Stablecoin Coordination
The U.S. Government Accountability Office is pressing the FDIC to improve coordination around crypto and stablecoin risks, putting another spotlight on how fragmented digital asset oversight remains in Washington. TL;DR...
The U.S. Government Accountability Office is pressing the FDIC to improve coordination around crypto and stablecoin risks, putting another spotlight on how fragmented digital asset oversight remains in Washington.
TL;DR- The GAO recommendation tracker points to ongoing concern over digital asset coordination.
- The issue is not a new enforcement action; GAO recommendations are advisory.
- The focus is coordination between banking supervisors and other market regulators.
- Stablecoins remain central because they sit between crypto markets, payments and banking oversight.
The GAO’s role is not to regulate crypto directly. It audits, reviews and recommends. That distinction matters. A GAO recommendation does not force the FDIC to adopt a new rule tomorrow, and it does not create a direct enforcement action against any crypto company. But it can still shape policy pressure, especially when the subject is stablecoins and banking risk.
The recommendation tracking page for GAO-23-105346 centres on the need for formal coordination mechanisms around digital asset risks. In plain English, the concern is that crypto does not fit neatly inside one agency’s box. Stablecoins can look like payments, bank-like liabilities, securities-market infrastructure or commodity-market plumbing depending on the design and use case.
Why coordination mattersFragmented oversight has been one of the biggest problems in U.S. crypto policy. The SEC, CFTC, banking regulators and state-level supervisors have all had pieces of the puzzle, but the industry has often lacked a single, predictable framework. That creates uncertainty for companies and risk for regulators, who may not always see the same information at the same time.
For stablecoins, the coordination problem is especially important. A stablecoin issuer can hold reserves, interact with banks, move across public blockchains, serve offshore users and support DeFi markets. If those activities are monitored in silos, regulators may miss broader risk patterns.
The FDIC angle also matters because stablecoin regulation increasingly touches bank subsidiaries, reserve custody and payment rails. If banks become more active in tokenized deposits, settlement networks or stablecoin-related services, banking supervisors need clear channels for sharing information with market regulators.
Not a crackdown, but a pressure signalThe useful way to read the GAO update is not as a dramatic anti-crypto move. It is a pressure signal. The agency is effectively saying that digital asset risks are too cross-cutting to be handled casually or informally.
That may sound bureaucratic, but it has practical consequences. Formal coordination can affect how quickly agencies respond to stablecoin failures, exchange collapses, custody issues or bank exposure to crypto firms. It can also influence how new legislation is implemented once Congress gives agencies clearer responsibilities.
What the market should watchFor crypto companies, the question is whether this kind of pressure leads to clearer rules or simply more overlapping supervision. Clear coordination could be positive if it reduces contradictory agency views and gives firms a better compliance path. It could become more burdensome if coordination turns into duplicated reporting and heavier scrutiny without clearer standards.
For stablecoin issuers, the message is straightforward: banking regulators are not going away. The more stablecoins are treated as part of payment and reserve infrastructure, the more coordination with banking agencies becomes unavoidable.
This article was written by the News Desk and edited by Samuel Rae.
Originally Sourced from the GAO at Government Accountability Office
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