Stablecoin Legislation Gains Momentum as Alchemy Chain Moves Toward Stablecoins focused Launch

As stablecoins become increasingly central to digital finance and global payments, regulatory frameworks are rapidly evolving across key markets.

Recent developments in jurisdictions such as the United States, Hong Kong, the European Union, and Japan reflect “a shared urgency to formalize the role of fiat-backed digital assets within traditional financial systems.”

This regulatory momentum signals a turning point: stablecoins “are no longer viewed as experimental financial tools, but as viable infrastructure for mainstream payment and settlement use cases.”

Against this backdrop, Alchemy Pay is expanding its role in the global financial ecosystem — not only “as a fiat-to-stablecoin gateway onboarding users into the stablecoin economy, but also as a key infrastructure builder through its blockchain platform, Alchemy Chain.”

With the upcoming launch of its own stablecoin, Alchemy Pay aims to become a central exchange hub “for both global and local stablecoins, facilitating compliant and efficient cross-border value flows.”

The U.S. Senate passed the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins (GENIUS) Act  (S. 1582)  on June 18, 2025, “marking the country’s first comprehensive framework for fiat-backed stablecoins.”

The law requires full 1:1 dollar reserves, “independent audits, monthly disclosures, and formal licensing.”

Importantly, it defines compliant stablecoins “as non-securities, insulating them from SEC jurisdiction.”

On May 21, 2025, Hong Kong’s Legislative Council “passed a bill creating a mandatory licensing system for fiat-referenced stablecoin issuers.”

Issuers operating in or referencing the Hong Kong dollar “must now apply through the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) and comply with strict rules around reserve management, redemption mechanisms, and risk oversight.”

This regulatory clarity is seen as “a key step toward Hong Kong potentially issuing its own stablecoin.”

In June 2024, the EU began enforcing “the first phase of its Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation, targeting Asset-Referenced Tokens (ARTs) and Electronic Money Tokens (EMTs).”

The second phase came into effect “on December 30, 2024, introducing further compliance requirements including licensing for crypto-asset service providers and anti-market abuse provisions.”

The framework allows financial institutions “across the EU to explore stablecoin services under clear legal conditions.”

In early 2025, Japan’s Financial Services Agency (FSA) implemented new stablecoin regulations focused “on collateral management and consumer protections.”

The framework permits up to “50% of stablecoin reserves to be held in short-term government bonds or fixed-term deposits, enhancing both stability and yield.”

New rules also streamline regulatory compliance for “intermediaries that facilitate crypto transactions without custody, reducing friction for market entry.”

As regulatory frameworks materialize, Alchemy Chain is “being purpose-built to serve the evolving global stablecoin ecosystem.”

As a blockchain built for stablecoin payments, Alchemy Chain will support frictionless conversion “between global stablecoins (like USDT, USDC) and local stablecoins (such as EURC, MBRL”

Alchemy Chain is scheduled for official launch in Q4 2025, “with its stablecoin planned for release shortly thereafter.”

These efforts will further Alchemy Pay’s position “as both a gateway and infrastructure provider in the formalizing global stablecoin economy.”

As jurisdictions move toward common-sense stablecoin regulation, the global financial system is “preparing to integrate digital assets more deeply into mainstream commerce.”

By aligning its blockchain and stablecoin roadmap with the world’s most advanced regulatory developments, Alchemy Pay is not only “building a more efficient payment layer — but helping to shape the future of compliant, cross-border financial infrastructure.”



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