The US Securities and Exchange Commission has clarified that broker dealers may apply a 2% “haircut” to certain dollar backed stablecoins when calculating their net capital, easing prior uncertainty around how these assets should be treated under existing rules.
SEC Guidance on Stablecoin Net Capital Treatment
In updated guidance issued by staff from the Division of Trading and Markets, the regulator stated it would not object to broker-dealers applying a 2% deduction to qualifying stablecoin holdings. Previously, some firms interpreted the rules conservatively, applying a 100% haircut, effectively excluding stablecoins from their net capital calculations.
Under the revised interpretation, a broker dealer holding $100 million in eligible stablecoins can count $98 million toward its regulatory capital requirement. The move aligns stablecoin treatment more closely with low risk cash equivalents such as money market funds and short-term US Treasury instruments.

The clarification could support broader institutional participation in blockchain-based markets, particularly in tokenized securities and digital asset settlement. Stablecoins play a central role in on-chain transactions, offering dollar-linked liquidity across crypto trading platforms.
Stablecoin Market Growth and Ongoing Debate
The global stablecoin market currently stands near $295 billion in capitalization, slightly below its December 2025 peak above $300 billion. Growth accelerated after President Donald Trump signed the GENIUS stablecoin legislation in July 2025.

Despite expanding adoption, some policymakers continue to question whether stablecoins provide meaningful advantages over existing digital payment systems.
Disclaimer
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. Cryptocurrency trading involves risk and may result in financial loss.

