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The GENIUS Act would require banks to prioritize stablecoin owners over customers if theres a financial collapse.
After a flood of crypto industry campaign cash, the U.S. Senate is poised to pass a financial deregulation bill ensuring that when a bank goes out of business, the savings of cryptocurrency owners would be made whole before those of other bank customers.
During a bank collapse, the language buried deep in the bill could effectively require financial institutions to drain money from regular depositors savings and checking accounts and give it to cryptocurrency investors to reduce those investors losses.
The Senate legislation, known as the GENIUS Act, aims to establish a light-touch legal framework to allow banking and nonbanking institutions, such as cryptocurrency exchanges and even social media companies, to issue a form of cryptocurrency called stablecoins. The bill comes after pro-crypto interests spent at least $4 million since January lobbying Congress, the White House, and regulators on the bill and other matters, disclosures show.
Included in the legislation is a provision declaring that if a bank goes bankrupt or becomes insolvent, the claim of a person holding payment stablecoins issued by the payment stablecoin issuer shall have priority over all other claims against the payment stablecoin issuer.
https://www.levernews.com/cryptos-new-bailout-fund-your-savings-account/
harumph
(3,423 posts)The author of the source article is:
Adam Levitin, who does appear to be an academic at Georgetown.
https://www.law.georgetown.edu/faculty/adam-j-levitin/
If the allegations are true and Levitin's reading of the bill provision accurate, this is indeed disturbing.
dalton99a
(95,420 posts)Passages
(4,528 posts)https://www.weforum.org stories 2017/11 joseph-...
Nov 30, 2017 Nobel prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz has said the cryptocurrency 'doesn't serve any useful function'.
mdbl
(8,767 posts)The prisoners are running the prison - - - and your government.
Passages
(4,528 posts)IthinkThereforeIAM
(3,328 posts)... I was mentioning to my folks who are in their 80's, "Part of why Epstein got busted was because all these, "investors", sent him money to, "invest", and they got their decadent sex parties. Now there is bitcoin, ether, et al... and it is untraceable, so we don't see much about that stuff anymore".
ihaveaquestion
(4,811 posts)Passages
(4,528 posts)Marthe48
(23,471 posts)Or mayonnaise jars buried in the back yard. Old fashioned ways of hiding and protecting my money is looking better and better.
It seems like the only thing the evil bastards work on is getting hold of other peoples' money.
louis-t
(24,654 posts)My second thought was: Time to get out the pitchforks and torches.
PortTack
(35,824 posts)Nittersing
(8,514 posts)As the Senate works to move the stablecoin GENIUS Act forward, credit unions are urging Senators to keep the GENIUS Act a cryptocurrency bill free from any amendments. This includes strong opposition to a poison pill amendment offered by Sen. Roger Marshall, R-Kan., that would add his Big Box Bailout language to the bill.
The senator attempted to hotline his amendment Thursday, a strategic procedure to bring up a measure by unanimous consent without a vote. If one or more senators object, it stops the hotline attempt. Americas Credit Unions Chief Advocacy Officer Carrie Hunt responded quickly, urging Senators to stop Marshalls hotline in a LinkedIn post.
Also Thursday, President/CEO Jim Nussles op-ed raising credit union concerns about this poison pill amendment appeared in Credit Union Times, and he shared the op-ed in a message to Senate staff. .
If the Big Box Bailout amendment is adopted, the consequences for consumers would be crippling, stated Nussle. Credit cards provide the lifeblood of credit availability for consumers and small businesses. Over 70% of U.S. GDP depends on consumer spending spending that is driven by credit cards. Big box retailers would now be able to dictate which credit network will process transactions and go with the cheapest and potentially least secure option.
wolfie001
(7,988 posts)To stay in power, they pretend jeebus is coming any minute and those evil Dems are so bad. Since 1980 by the way. 45 years ago. It's worked, of course, because the average American is stupid. *George Carlin cited.
Response to douglas9 (Original post)
Farmer-Rick This message was self-deleted by its author.
Farmer-Rick
(12,787 posts)With the FDIC there is no priority. It simply covers $250,000 per depositor, per insured bank, for each account ownership category.
Sooooo some kind of major change to FDIC will be required to give bit coin a priority. Will a thief who has $500,000 in bit coin take priority over an average person with $250,000 regular deposit?
This seems to only cover creditors in a bankruptcy.
quakerboy
(14,908 posts)But yeah.. this sounds more like a tricksy new way of issuing preferred stock and trying to make feel like crypto is more secure and stable than it actually is, to me.
karynnj
(61,106 posts)From your link, this paragraph shows how failures of these misnamed "stable" coins could undermine the resilance of the banking system maybe more than derivatives held by banks did in 2008.
From your link:
The GENIUS Act is effectively letting FDIC insurance leak out to cover uninsured stablecoins, without any insurance premiums paid, Levitin wrote in a May 7 blog post. Whatever the merits of stablecoins, they shouldnt be subsidized by the banking system.
Where the regular customer could be hurt might be mutual funds if they become "custodians" of the stable coins.
If this author is correct, the "genius" ????? act seems to limit the risk to stable coin buyers by transferring the impact of failure to others. As one who can not even see why crypto currency or stable coins serve any legitimate purpose I don't see why the country as a whole has to bear any part of the cost.
Clouds Passing
(8,208 posts)Pinback
(13,662 posts)Crypto bros invested heavily in several races last cycle, mostly Republican candidates but not exclusively.
Clouds Passing
(8,208 posts)Hekate
(100,133 posts)Hotler
(13,747 posts)Hekate
(100,133 posts)Bookmarking this article but I have to walk away from the topic for the time being
Figarosmom
(13,489 posts)Credit Unions ?
Nittersing
(8,514 posts)As the Senate works to move the stablecoin GENIUS Act forward, credit unions are urging Senators to keep the GENIUS Act a cryptocurrency bill free from any amendments. This includes strong opposition to a poison pill amendment offered by Sen. Roger Marshall, R-Kan., that would add his Big Box Bailout language to the bill.
The senator attempted to hotline his amendment Thursday, a strategic procedure to bring up a measure by unanimous consent without a vote. If one or more senators object, it stops the hotline attempt. Americas Credit Unions Chief Advocacy Officer Carrie Hunt responded quickly, urging Senators to stop Marshalls hotline in a LinkedIn post.
Also Thursday, President/CEO Jim Nussles op-ed raising credit union concerns about this poison pill amendment appeared in Credit Union Times, and he shared the op-ed in a message to Senate staff. .
If the Big Box Bailout amendment is adopted, the consequences for consumers would be crippling, stated Nussle. Credit cards provide the lifeblood of credit availability for consumers and small businesses. Over 70% of U.S. GDP depends on consumer spending spending that is driven by credit cards. Big box retailers would now be able to dictate which credit network will process transactions and go with the cheapest and potentially least secure option.
Figarosmom
(13,489 posts)Nigrum Cattus
(1,356 posts)Russell Vought is the RWRE organizer that wants this.
malthaussen
(18,632 posts)... long ago, in a universe far away, it meant something. "Backed by the full faith and credit of the US Government," even. Some irony.
-- Mal
Kid Berwyn
(25,128 posts)Works perfectly well for the wealthy, 24/7/366 in leap years.
Be The Light
(163 posts)And should the bank fail they should get crypto back.
If I put 200 dollars in a bank I want that money back in dollars.
Not funny money. Those asswipes need to build their own crypto banks.
Fucking corruption beyond belief!
BurnDoubt
(1,912 posts)Counterfeit Money is one of the first moves when War is made.
We ARE under attack from multiple adversaries, Foreign AND Domestic..
Cash Is King.
Klepto can undermine our entire Economy.
It is a betrayal of our UNITY, FAITH AND TRUST. ("To our Wives and Lovers... May they never meet".)
How do you suppose it will go when you go to Mad Max's with your Bitcoin to buy a bag of Cheetos?
I bet Mad Max will have a lot of Bitcoin... you, not so much. But the stew that day will be a Bit richer.
Fuckin' Dummies!!!!!
BidenRocks
(3,511 posts)Crypto from a Coinstar machine?
No! Poor people can't afford that.
Deuxcents
(27,739 posts)They could take that according to this post. Do we just pay everything with money orders?