Federal Reserve Official Expresses Concern About Stablecoins

Federal Reserve vice chairman Michael Barr expresses concern about stablecoins and emphasizes the need for legislative efforts. Learn more about the potential impact on financial innovation and the central bank's role.

Posted 10 months ago in Blockchain


Federal Reserve Bank vice chairman Michael Barr speaking at a fintech event in Philadelphia.

Michael Barr expressed strong concern about stablecoins and appreciation of legislative efforts to address them at the Philadelphia Fed's fintech event.

The Federal Reserve Bank vice chairman spoke at the Philadelphia Fed's fintech event on Sept. 8 about what the central bank's role is in financial innovation. Research and supervision was the short answer, with a nod to the FedNow Service. Along with the standard disclaimer about it making no decisions without congressional authorization, Barr provided an overview of the Fed's 'current focus' of central bank digital currency (CBDC) research. He characterized it as 'basic research […] that might support a CBDC payments backbone, or for other purposes in the existing payments system.'

Specifically, Barr mentioned system architecture for recording transactions and ownership in ledgers and tokenization models. A FEDS Notes publication the same day on wholesale CBDCs also emphasized that 'the technology associated with tokenized platforms is not incompatible with existing central bank money functioning as a settlement asset.'

Barr reminded his audience of the Fed's novel activities supervision program, which it introduced last month. That dedicated team of supervisors can provide feedback that would allow a federally supervised bank to obtain 'written supervisory non-objection' to its novel activities involving stablecoins, among other things. Barr said this activity aligns with Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) policies outlined in interpretative letters 1174 and 1179.

Strong federal oversight of stablecoins, which is foreseen in the OCC letters, is in the interest of the Fed, Barr said, as a dollar-pegged stablecoin 'borrows the trust of the central bank.' He expressed his appreciation for current legislative efforts: The Fed equipped large banks, regional banks, community banks and credit unions with the rails for broadly accessible 24-hour instant payments through the FedNow Service, introduced in July, Barr said. He added that current volumes of the service are small, but it is up to the depository institutions to make the service available.

Last updated 9/9/2023, 2:44:02 AM

0
0
Flag
3 Views
c3e6be48-6022-40e6-9ceb-285fb39cc4a5

Related Articles


Related Questions

News Letter

Subscribe to the CryptoCat.ai newsletter to stay updated with the latest cryptocurrency news, insightful articles, market trends, and more – delivered directly to your inbox!




Twitter

Is email too old school? Well you can get your news directly on twitter just by following us

https://cryptocat.ai