GENIUS Act 2025, BRICS Pay Push & South Asia’s Digital Finance Future
The United States changed the global digital finance landscape in July 2025 by signing the GENIUS Act into law. Passed with strong bipartisan support in the Senate and House, the act requires...
The United States changed the global digital finance landscape in July 2025 by signing the GENIUS Act into law. Passed with strong bipartisan support in the Senate and House, the act requires stablecoin issuers to hold one-to-one reserves in U.S. dollars or Treasury bills and publish monthly reserve reports. Anti-money laundering rules and federal licensing now bring the $250 billion stablecoin market into a clear regulatory framework. This legislation strengthens the dollar’s dominance in global finance while signaling Washington’s intent to lead in digital payment systems.
Despite its promise, the GENIUS Act faces criticism from economists and bankers. While it bans issuers from paying direct interest, third-party platforms may still offer rewards, creating risks of a $6.6 trillion deposit shift from traditional banks into stablecoins. Another concern comes from bankruptcy provisions: holders have “super-priority” rights over reserves, yet those reserves remain outside the bankruptcy estate. This could force liquidation instead of restructuring during financial stress, potentially destabilizing markets already sensitive to liquidity shocks.
To address these risks, the U.S. Treasury launched a Request for Comment (RFC) on August 18, 2025, seeking public input on using artificial intelligence, APIs, blockchain analytics, and digital identity tools to track illicit finance under the GENIUS Act. The consultation remains open until October 17, 2025, aiming to develop safeguards before stablecoins become a mainstream payment medium. Washington’s proactive stance reflects its desire to control innovation while keeping the global financial system secure.
Meanwhile, the BRICS alliance has expanded efforts to reduce reliance on the U.S. dollar. At the July 2025 Rio Summit, members revealed that 90% of intra-BRICS trade now settles in local currencies, compared to just 65% two years ago. The BRICS Pay platform allows cross-border transactions without using SWIFT, lowering costs for member states. A new BRICS Multilateral Guarantee (BMG) Fund will launch in 2026 to attract private investment, where each $1 of guarantee is expected to unlock $5–$10 in capital flows. These steps show BRICS nations are building alternative financial infrastructure at record speed.
Adding to this momentum, BRICS central banks bought 166 tonnes of gold in the second quarter of 2025 alone, marking a 41% increase over the average quarterly purchase in the last decade. This aggressive buying signals a clear de-dollarization strategy. Analysts expect a BRICS settlement currency by 2026–27, designed to support trade and investments among member states while reducing dependency on Western-dominated financial systems. If successful, this shift could reshape the global monetary order within this decade.
Other South Asian nations show diverse responses to digital finance. Pakistan passed its first Virtual Assets Act in 2025, establishing the Pakistan Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority (PVARA) and launching a digital rupee pilot while exploring Bitcoin mining through surplus energy projects.
South Asia is uniquely situated at the intersection of two monetary systems: a U.S.-led stablecoin ecosystem with regulatory clarity and global liquidity, and a BRICS-led local currency ecosystem with a vision of multipolar trade flows and holdings in gold. Utilizing one side too heavily can become a risk: from regulated shocks to the U.S. system, or fragmentation within the BRICS processes. Finding commonality and engagement across systems will be paramount for stability in the long term.
A sensible way forward for South Asia could be utilizing CBDCs, regulated stablecoins, and regional payment clearing entities as several different modalities/work streams to not only diversify settlement channels, but to encourage CBDC, diversified payments, and regulated stablecoin settlements even in competition to their U.S or BRICS counterparts. This hybrid solution provides independence from Washington or BRICS systems while continuing to build local capacity, while maintaining engagement in the global capacity.
The convergence of the GENIUS Act, BRICS Pay expansion, record gold purchases, and South Asia’s digital reforms marks a turning point in global finance. For South Asia, the next five years will decide whether it emerges as a leader in digital payments or remains vulnerable to geopolitical currency rivalries shaping the world economy.
