Treasury GENIUS Act Rule, CFTC Lawsuits, DOL 401(k) Alternatives, Crypto Tax Bill
Summary
Paul Hastings summarizes four major U.S. financial regulatory developments: Treasury's NPRM establishing criteria for state stablecoin regimes to qualify as substantially similar to the federal GENIUS Act framework; CFTC's lawsuits against Arizona, Connecticut, and Illinois asserting exclusive federal jurisdiction over prediction markets; DOL's proposed rule creating a fiduciary safe harbor for including alternative investments in 401(k)s; and House members releasing an updated Digital Asset PARITY Act discussion draft addressing digital asset taxation.
What changed
The Treasury Department issued an NPRM implementing Section 4(c) of the GENIUS Act, establishing the methodology for determining whether state-level stablecoin regulatory regimes are substantially similar to the federal framework, with a 60-day comment period. Separately, the CFTC, joined by the DOJ, filed enforcement actions against Arizona, Connecticut, and Illinois for their attempts to regulate CFTC-registered designated contract markets, asserting exclusive federal jurisdiction over event contracts under the Commodity Exchange Act. The DOL released a proposed rule creating fiduciary safe harbor protections for plan fiduciaries selecting designated investment alternatives including alternatives in 401(k) plans. House members released an updated discussion draft of the Digital Asset PARITY Act to establish a comprehensive federal framework for digital asset taxation.
For affected parties, stablecoin issuers under $10 billion in consolidated outstanding issuance should monitor Treasury's substantially similar determination process to assess potential state-level regulatory pathways. CFTC-registered designated contract markets and prediction market operators in Arizona, Connecticut, and Illinois should track the outcome of the CFTC's jurisdictional enforcement actions. Plan fiduciaries and service providers offering 401(k) platforms should evaluate the DOL's proposed alternative investment safe harbor for potential plan menu expansion opportunities. Digital asset market participants should monitor the Digital Asset PARITY Act's progress as it may establish comprehensive federal tax treatment for digital assets.
What to do next
- Monitor for updates
Archived snapshot
Apr 7, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
April 7, 2026
Treasury Proposes GENIUS Act Rule, CFTC Challenges States, DOL Expands Alternative Investments in 401(k)s, Congress Releases Updated Crypto Tax Bill
LinkedIn Facebook X Send Embed
[co-author: Samantha Ackel]
The Treasury Department issued a notice of proposed rulemaking for determining whether a state-level regulatory regime is substantially similar to the federal regulatory framework under the GENIUS Act. The CFTC filed lawsuits challenging the actions of Arizona, Connecticut and Illinois against CFTC-registered designated contract markets, asserting the CFTC’s exclusive jurisdiction to regulate event contracts under the Commodity Exchange Act.
Two members of the House released an updated discussion draft of the Digital Asset PARITY Act to regulate the taxation of digital assets. The Department of Labor released a proposed rule designed to encourage inclusion of alternative assets in 401(k)s to provide retirement account holders access to additional types of investments. The New Hampshire Business Finance Authority received a provisional rating from Moody’s for bitcoin-backed municipal bonds.
Regulatory Updates
Treasury Issues Notice of Proposed Rulemaking Under GENIUS Act
- On April 1, the Treasury Department issued a notice of proposed rulemaking for determining whether a state-level regulatory regime is substantially similar to the federal regulatory framework.
- The GENIUS Act permits certain smaller issuers — those with less than $10 billion in consolidated outstanding stablecoin issuance — to opt into a state-level regulatory regime, provided that regime is certified as “substantially similar” to the federal framework.
- In implementing Section 4(c) of the GENIUS Act, the Treasury Department is tasked with determining when a state-level regulatory regime is substantially similar to the federal regulatory framework. The comment period will close 60 days after the date of publication in the Federal Register.
CFTC Sues Three States to Reaffirm Its Exclusive Jurisdiction Over Prediction Markets
- On April 2, the CFTC, joined by the Department of Justice, filed lawsuits challenging the actions of Arizona, Connecticut and Illinois against CFTC-registered designated contract markets, asserting the CFTC’s exclusive jurisdiction to regulate event contracts under the Commodity Exchange Act (CEA).
- The CFTC recently issued an Advanced Notice of Proposed Rulemaking to assist the agency with identifying areas of confusion regarding the proper application of the CEA and the CFTC’s regulations to prediction markets and expects to move forward with regulation reinforcing those obligations.
- On March 31, CFTC Director of Enforcement David Miller clarified that insider trading laws apply to prediction markets under the CEA and anti-fraud provisions, and that one of the agency’s top enforcement priorities will be combating insider trading, fraud and market manipulation.
Department of Labor Releases Proposed Rule to Expand Alternative Investments in 401(k)s
- On March 30, the Department of Labor released a proposed rule, the Fiduciary Duties in Selecting Designated Investment Alternatives, that provides a safe harbor for a fiduciary’s duty of prudence under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) in connection with selecting designated investment alternatives for participant-directed defined contribution retirement plans. The proposal aims to allow fiduciaries to consider a broader range of financial instruments when designing plan investment lineups, including funds that hold alternative assets.
- This proposal implements Section 3(c) of the President’s Executive Order 14330, “Democratizing Access to Alternative Assets for 401(k) Investors.” EO 14330 contains a definition of alternative assets that includes holdings in actively managed investment vehicles which are investing in digital assets, as well as debt instruments secured by real estate and private market investments not traded on public exchanges, among others. The comment period will close on June 1.
Federal Reserve Gov. Barr on the GENIUS Act
- On March 31, in a speech at the Federalist Society, Federal Reserve Gov. Michael Barr told attendees that robust implementation of the GENIUS Act is needed among federal and state regulators. According to Barr, key issues include regulation of reserve assets, the potential for regulatory arbitrage, the scope of permissible activities for stablecoin issuers beyond stablecoin issuance, appropriate capital and liquidity requirements, anti-money-laundering controls and consumer protection requirements. Barr stated that while the GENIUS Act made important progress in creating a regulatory framework for stablecoins, a great deal will depend on how federal and state regulators implement the statute.
Congressional Updates
Market Structure Negotiation on Stablecoin Yield Continues
- Discussions regarding stablecoin yield within the market structure legislative text continued. Crypto and banking industry representatives are reviewing the updated stablecoin yield proposal and engaging in discussions on Capitol Hill.
- As background, the Senate Banking and Agriculture Committees have released drafts of the digital asset market structure legislation. The White House convened various meetings with executives and trade associations from the crypto industry and banking industry to continue negotiations, especially regarding stablecoin yield. For additional detail on the stablecoin yield issue, please see the following articles published on Feb. 9, Feb. 17 and Feb. 23.
Representatives Release Updated Discussion Draft of Crypto Tax Bill
- Reps. Max Miller (R-OH) and Steven Horsford (D-NV) released an updated discussion draft of the Digital Asset PARITY Act to regulate the taxation of digital assets. The bill would establish a safe harbor for digital asset trading and a de minimis tax exemption for payment stablecoins. The draft discussion contains a few new provisions for digital assets:
- The sale or exchange of stablecoins would not be subject to gain or loss unless the basis in the stablecoin was less than 99% of the redemption value. The basis in the stablecoin does not include transaction costs.
- There is a trading safe harbor for those who trade digital assets on their own behalf to avoid creating a U.S. trade or business. But the digital assets cannot represent equity, debt or similar property rights and cannot derive their value mainly from fiat currency, commodities, securities or other financial instruments.
- The discussion provides for digital asset lending agreements comparable to securities loan agreements under current law (IRC Section 1058).
- The discussion would apply the wash-sale rules to digital assets.
- The constructive sale rules of current law (IRC Section 1259) would also apply to digital assets.
- The discussion draft would also tax passive validators upon receipt of a newly created digital asset.
Senators Introduce Digital Asset Infrastructure Bill
- On March 30, Sens. Bill Cassidy (R-LA) and Cynthia Lummis (R-WY) introduced the Mined in America Act to bring digital asset infrastructure to the U.S. and codify the President’s EO 14233 to establish a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve.
Additional Updates
First Bitcoin-Backed State Municipal Bond Receives Moody’s Rating
On April 1, the New Hampshire Business Finance Authority (BFA) received a Ba2 provisional rating from Moody’s for the first of its kind bitcoin-backed municipal bonds. The BFA announced their plans in November 2025 to issue $100 million worth of bonds for municipal projects through proceeds from bitcoin collateral.
Send Print ReportRelated Posts
Latest Posts
- UK Equity Capital Markets Insights — April 2026
- Treasury Proposes GENIUS Act Rule, CFTC Challenges States, DOL Expands Alternative Investments in 401(k)s, Congress Releases Updated Crypto Tax Bill See more »
DISCLAIMER: Because of the generality of this update, the information provided herein may not be applicable in all situations and should not be acted upon without specific legal advice based on particular situations.
Attorney Advertising.
©
Paul Hastings LLP
2026
Written by:
Paul Hastings LLP Contact + Follow Josh Boehm + Follow Chris Daniel + Follow Larry Finnell + Follow Meagan Griffin + Follow Dina Ellis Rochkind + Follow Lisa Rubin + Follow Eric Sibbitt + Follow Dana Syracuse + Follow Stephen Turanchik + Follow more
PUBLISH YOUR CONTENT ON JD SUPRA
- ✔ Increased readership
- ✔ Actionable analytics
- ✔ Ongoing writing guidance Join more than 70,000 authors publishing their insights on JD Supra
Published In:
401k + Follow Bitcoin + Follow CFTC + Follow Department of Labor (DOL) + Follow Digital Assets + Follow Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) + Follow Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NOPR) + Follow Proposed Legislation + Follow Public Finance + Follow Stablecoins + Follow Taxation + Follow The GENIUS Act + Follow U.S. Treasury + Follow Finance & Banking + Follow Securities + Follow Tax + Follow more
Paul Hastings LLP on:
Solve with 2Captcha
Solve with 2Captcha
Related changes
Get daily alerts for JD Supra Finance & Banking
Daily digest delivered to your inbox.
Free. Unsubscribe anytime.
Source
About this page
Every important government, regulator, and court update from around the world. One place. Real-time. Free. Our mission
Source document text, dates, docket IDs, and authority are extracted directly from Paul Hastings.
The plain-English summary, classification, and "what to do next" steps are AI-generated from the original text. Cite the source document, not the AI analysis.
Classification
Who this affects
Taxonomy
Browse Categories
Get alerts for this source
We'll email you when JD Supra Finance & Banking publishes new changes.