Stablecoin firms should be registered in US — Circle’s Jeremy Allaire
Circle co-founder Jeremy Allaire says all dollar-based stablecoin issuers should register in the US, citing consumer protection and fair competition in the crypto market.
Archive context
Older archive item. Useful for background and entity history, but not a fresh market-moving signal.
Circle co-founder Jeremy Allaire says all dollar-based stablecoin issuers should register in the US, citing consumer protection and fair competition in the crypto market.
Why this matters
This cryptocurrency story adds another data point to the current market tape and is useful when read alongside nearby source coverage.
Original source
Read on CointelegraphRelated market context
Fireblocks integrates Circle Gateway, making USDC the top stablecoin on its platform
The integration enhances USDC's institutional appeal, potentially reshaping stablecoin market dynamics while posing risks of depen...
Stripe and Advent Bid $53 Billion for PayPal, Linking Two Stablecoin Players
Payments company Stripe has offered to buy PayPal for $53 billion, teaming with private-equity firm Advent International on a bid...
Sony’s stablecoin plan sends PlayStation crypto rumors racing ahead of the facts
According to online chatter, you'd be mistaken to think that Sony will soon let PlayStation users buy games using a Sony-issued cr...
Visa launching internal stablecoin platform for clients that provides access to OUSD: report
Open Standard's stablecoin is expected to become a major competitor to Circle's USDC, the dominant stablecoin in the U.S.
FATF urges faster crypto AML enforcement as stablecoin crime rises
Increased AML enforcement on stablecoins may drive up compliance costs, impacting smaller issuers and reshaping global crypto regu...
US reportedly exploring air assault options against Cuba, and crypto markets should be paying attention
Geopolitical tensions from potential US-Cuba conflict could impact crypto markets, influencing Bitcoin's correlation with gold and...