Travis Hill, chair of the US Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), confirmed that, in his opinion, a law passed in ...
FDIC says stablecoin holders will not qualify for federal deposit insurance under new US rules, leaving digital dollar users without the protections given to traditional bank deposits.
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. rolled back a 2009 policy that banned nonbanks from buying failed banks, a move the agency says it aims to widen the bidder pool and cut failure costs.
Payment stablecoin holders won’t be eligible for federal deposit insurance even if their assets are held at insured banks, the federal regulator charged with overseeing the bank backstop said.
Private equity firms and other investors looking to buy up failed banks will face fewer restrictions after a US banking regulator reversed an Obama-era policy.
FDIC chief says stablecoins will not qualify for deposit insurance under the GENIUS Act, including pass-through coverage.
Mon, November 24, 2025 at 10:33 PM UTC Got more than $250,000 sitting in one bank account? Only the first $250,000 is protected by FDIC insurance. The rest is uninsured, which means you could lose it ...
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FDIC Chair Travis Hill is proposing that stablecoins should not get any form of insurance as the regulator moves to implement ...
Worried about whether your cash is safe at your bank? You’re not alone. When Gallup surveyed Americans about their feelings regarding bank safety after the 2023 failures of Silicon Valley Bank and ...
Julia Kagan is a financial/consumer journalist and former senior editor, personal finance, of Investopedia. Ebony Howard is a certified public accountant and a QuickBooks ProAdvisor tax expert. She ...