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Trump Signs GENIUS Bill as Private Stablecoins Corner CBDCs in Digital Dollar Race | PYMNTS.com

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It finally happened. On Friday (July 18), at a White House Ceremony, U.S. President Donald Trump signed into law the country’s first-ever piece of crypto legislation, the GENIUS Act.

In response to the regulatory momentum that appears poised to reshape the future of digital assets in America, crypto markets have soared to an all-time-high, surpassing $4 trillion for the first time.

The long-awaited policy framework could signal a brand-new era for crypto in the U.S., or at least for stablecoins, the dollar-pegged tokenized assets that the GENIUS Act was written to regulate. The GENIUS Act represents a win for the administration on a political level, as well as a potential victory for the Trump family itself on a business level due to the various crypto interests of Trump’s family members, which include stablecoins. 

It may have passed with the support of 206 Republicans and 102 Democrats, but the GENIUS Act’s path through “Crypto Week” was not without friction and compromise. Of particular note, several of the Republicans who voted to halt the progress of the bills, including Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, said they wanted to add a provision to the stablecoin bill that would ban the Federal Reserve from issuing digital currency, known as a central bank digital currency (CBDC). 

While that provision ultimately didn’t make it into the GENIUS Act, Congress agreed to link the Anti-CBDC bill to the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), widely considered a “must-pass” package.

But a unique quality of the NDAA is that it must go through a conference committee along its journey, where provisions can often fall out. Reportedly, the CBDC ban may be one of those priorities slated for removal. 

“It’s not bipartisan in a way that both GENIUS and CLARITY are,” Senate Banking Chair Tim Scott reportedly told reporters on Friday. “I support the notion, but it’s not widely supported, and frankly, not supported very well at all, on the Senate Democrat side.”

Still, in the same way municipal broadband has emerged to challenge monopolistic internet providers, a CBDC could redefine the balance of power between public interest and private capital in financial services. The future of financial services, now that stablecoins have gained legitimacy, is one that bears watching.

See also: 4 Questions CFOs Need to Ask as Wall Street Embraces Stablecoins 

Where the US Stands on Stablecoins and CBDCs and What’s Next

The Federal Reserve has long flirted with the idea of a CBDC, holding conferences, publishing discussion papers and launching exploratory studies. But compared to China, which has aggressively piloted its digital yuan, or the European Union, which is actively developing a digital euro under its MiCA regulatory framework, the Fed’s progress has been cautious, bordering on passive.

The Federal Reserve has made no binding commitments to develop or pilot a retail CBDC. Fed Chair Jerome Powell has consistently stated that any such move would require clear support from the executive branch and authorization from Congress.

That position may be politically prudent — but it also reflects a gridlock fueled by competing narratives: privacy vs. control, innovation vs. security and market freedom vs. public utility.

Still, the political momentum favors stablecoins, not central banks. A U.S. CBDC would represent a public alternative to the privately issued stablecoin solutions promoted by the crypto industry.

“The U.S. plans to use stablecoins as a means of maintaining the hegemony of the U.S. Dollar and by dollarising economies around the world from the ground up,” said Simon McLoughlin, CEO of Uphold, said in a post on LinkedIn. “The passing of this Bill throws the weight of the world’s largest economy behind blockchain technology and digital assets.”

Read more: Project Agora Bank Consortium Counters Stablecoins With Programmable Fiat 

Can Stablecoins Provide a New Operating System for Financial Services?

In many ways, the passage of the GENIUS Act can be seen as the potential beginning of a new operating model for banks.

That transformation may not be easy. Many U.S. banks are still in the early stages of stablecoin exploration. Liquidity, compliance and consumer behavior pose meaningful barriers. For instance, liquidity requirements for stablecoin issuers — especially under the GENIUS Act’s transparency provisions — are likely to exceed traditional reserves held for comparable fiat products. Additionally, there are fears of deposit flight, where consumers move funds into stablecoins for yield or mobility, undermining core retail deposits.

“For central banks globally, it sets a precedent: you can’t ignore the private digital dollar, and you can’t delay building the governance to manage around it,” said Ravi de Silva, founder of de Risk Partners and former global head of compliance testing for financial crimes at Citigroup, in an interview with PYMNTS. “For institutions operating at scale, the Act’s audit and disclosure standards will become the new baseline.”

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US Proposes to Expand Delivery Drone Flights  | PYMNTS.com

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The Trump administration has proposed a rule to significantly expand drone operations, which could alter America’s shopping habits, boosting retailers like Walmart and Amazon as they expand into delivering consumer packages by autonomous aircraft.

The proposal, unveiled on Tuesday (Aug. 5), aims to safely integrate drones — technically called unmanned aircraft systems — into the national airspace. Under current rules, operators must seek individual waivers for flights beyond the drone operator’s direct line of visual sight.

The Federal Aviation Administration’s (FAA) Bryan Bedford said comments accompanying the rule announcement that the “Beyond Visual Line of Sight” proposal is key to realizing drones’ societal and economic benefits.” He cited package delivery first, followed by agriculture, aerial surveying, public safety, recreation and flight testing.

An FAA fact sheet said that under the proposal, drone operations would occur at or below 400 feet above ground level, from pre-designated and access-controlled locations. Operators would need FAA approval for the areas where they intend to fly, and proposals for a single operator to fly multiple drones would be evaluated on a case-by-case basis.

Late last year, Amazon’s Prime Air drone delivery service got a boost with new drones that have double the range and half the noise of previous models.

Approved by the FAA the month before, the drones began operations in select areas of Arizona and Texas, delivering small packages weighing up to five pounds. The retail behemoth paused the aircraft for two months for a software upgrade but resumed flights in April. Amazon aims to deliver 500 million packages by drones by the end of the decade, with groceries and other retail goods on a customer’s doorstep within an hour of ordering.

In June, Walmart expanded its ultra-fast drone delivery across five states to Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and Texas.

Accounting firm PWC sees drones making 808 million deliveries to global consumers by 2034, at an average cost of around $2 per package. 

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Household Debt Rises to $18.39 Trillion as Auto, Mortgage Originations Tick Up | PYMNTS.com

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Mortgage balances led the rise, growing by $131 billion to $12.94 trillion as housing activity remained stable despite affordability concerns. Auto loan originations also climbed, totaling $188 billion — up from $166 billion in Q1. Credit card balances rose by $27 billion, while lenders expanded aggregate credit limits by $78 billion, pointing to continued lender optimism in extending consumer credit. 

But that expansion came alongside rising signs of financial pressure. Student loan delinquencies surged as paused missed payments resumed reporting. The share of seriously delinquent student debt jumped to 12.9% — up from just 0.8% a year ago. More than 2.2 million borrowers saw their credit scores fall by over 100 points, and 1 million lost at least 150. Bloomberg Economics estimates these credit shocks could pull $63 billion in consumer spending out of the economy on an annualized basis.

Delinquency rates for mortgages and home equity lines of credit also ticked up, though performance remains strong relative to historical benchmarks. Still, rising mortgage costs have pushed 70% of households earning more than $100,000 into living paycheck to paycheck — a sharp shift in financial stability among higher-income consumers. 

As traditional credit becomes harder to manage, younger consumers are turning to alternatives. Buy now, pay later (BNPL) usage continues to rise, especially among Generation Z and younger millennials — 58% of whom now prefer BNPL over credit cards. That shift is also shaping commerce habits: 43% of shoppers now choose merchants based on whether installment plans are available.

At the same time, 69% of Gen Z consumers report living paycheck to paycheck. One in three U.S. adults also said they experience surprise expenses of several hundred dollars each year — making short-term financing tools more of a necessity than a convenience. 

Together, these trends reveal a consumer credit landscape in flux. Borrowing continues to rise, but so do the risks tied to repayment, especially for younger and mid-income households navigating higher costs and shrinking buffers.

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Upstart Sees Surge in Demand for Auto and Small Dollar Loans | PYMNTS.com

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Triple-digit gains across key business segments — as measured in loan originations and revenues — were not enough to stave off a 7% drop in Upstart Holding’s shares in after-market trading on Tuesday (Aug. 5).

Company materials revealed that revenues surged 102% year on year in the second quarter, while the platform’s loan originations topped more than 372,590 in the period, up 159%. 

The data showed that as loans topped $2.6 billion, personal loan originations were up 143%. The company also noted that borrowers with super-prime FICO scores represented 26% of originations.

Upstart’s management noted on the call that other business lines such as auto-related loans also saw growth. The platform originated more than 4,600 auto loans in the second quarter, up more than 6x from a year ago and up 87% sequentially, equating to $114 million in volume. Home loans were up by 9x year on year to $68 million in originations, jumping 67% sequentially.

Management has guided to $1 billion in revenues for the current quarter, which is in line with Wall Street consensus.

Growth in Newer Business Lines

During a conference call with analysts, CEO Dave Girouard said that with respect to the auto business, “the dealership adoption right now is like nothing we’ve seen in the past, and the volume of loan requests and closed agreements from our dealer partners is on a steep climb. This is a recent phenomenon.”

Girouard said that the newer businesses in home and auto attracted almost 20% of new borrowers to the platform, including the small dollar loan product, which grew 40% sequentially, crossing more than $100 million in originations in the latest period. 

“Our growth last quarter was not a result of dramatic macro improvements or Fed rate decreases,” he said. “Our growth was primarily on the back of model improvements.”

Upstart’s models, he added, powered by AI, helped drive conversion rates from 19% in Q1 to 24% in Q2. The improvements were tied to Model 22, which the company launched in early May.

Funding Pipeline Outlook

“Our funding partnerships have been both durable and scalable, allowing us to grow rapidly while delivering the target returns our partners expect,” Girouard said. “With respect to banks and credit unions, we expect to reach a new all time high for monthly available funding in Q3, surpassing our prior peak from early 2022. The funding markets continue to improve as the year progresses, particularly since the Liberation Day fears in early April subsided.”

Added Girouard: “We’re building the ‘always on everything store’ for credit, aiming to persistently underwrite 100% of Americans.”

Upstart Co-founder and CTO Paul Gu said on the call that the model upgrades had translated into “numerous improvements and optimizations to how customers can pay, how much they pay, and when they pay. As a result, year-over-year population adjusted delinquency rates are down 20%, and raw delinquency rates are down 32%.”

CFO Sanjay Datta said in remarks on the call that “the broader macro has been idling in regards to its impact on credit trends, registering as neither a significant headwind nor tailwind over the past months.” Fee-based revenues were up 84%, he said, and was 15% better than guidance.

“Average loan size of approximately $7,570 was 15% lower than the prior quarter as model advancements drove higher approval rates in smaller loan amounts,” Datta said. Management also noted on the call that the shift to small dollar loan products also has moved to drive average loan sizes down.

Asked on the call about the competitive nature of the markets, Girouard said that the improved funding environment “does tend to bring more competitors into the space. So unsurprisingly, it’s a fairly competitive game these days … We’re very focused on having best offers both at super prime level and at our core business as well. We’re confident in our ability to grow our market share and keep our strength in those markets.”

As for the state of the consumer, Datta said: “We’ve been consistent in saying that the American consumer in aggregate is probably overspending relative to the income levels that we’re earning and that’s been true for a while now. If that balance improves, we would expect that credit trends would improve as well.”

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