Fidelity's new money market fund gives stablecoin issuers a regulated home for the $315 billion in reserves the GENIUS Act now governs.
Fidelity launched the Fidelity Reserves Digital Fund (FYMXX), a government money market fund that invests exclusively in Treasury bonds, cash and overnight repurchase agreements — the three asset classes the GENIUS Act permits for stablecoin backing.
"Stablecoin issuers need reserve solutions that satisfy both regulatory requirements and operational liquidity demands," a Fidelity spokesperson said. "This fund bridges the gap between the $315 billion stablecoin market and the short-term government securities market."
The fund targets permitted payment stablecoin issuers required under the July 2025 law to maintain one-to-one backing in cash, short-duration Treasuries or qualifying government money market instruments. Tether's USDT, which commands 59% of the market with roughly $186 billion in circulation, held approximately $191.8 billion in reserve assets as of March 2026, according to its latest attestation, with US Treasury bills accounting for the majority.
Fidelity's entry follows State Street's comparable reserve fund launched this week, showing that traditional asset managers view stablecoin reserve management as a scalable fee business. The OCC's March 2026 proposed rulemaking, which opened a comment period that closed May 1, would further codify reserve composition requirements and create a rebuttable presumption that commercial relationships with affiliates constitute prohibited yield payments.
State Street Bank and Trust Company partnered with Anchorage Digital as initial supporters of its competing product, demonstrating how traditional banking, custody and digital asset firms are converging around stablecoin infrastructure. Fidelity's fund extends the firm's broader digital asset push, which earlier this year included the launch of the Fidelity Digital Dollar (FIDD) through its Fidelity Digital Assets division.
The regulatory gap that keeps growing
The GENIUS Act drew a bright line that permitted payment stablecoin issuers cannot pay holders any form of interest or yield. That clause forced Circle and Coinbase to restructure how USDC holders earn returns. But it left untouched instruments that decline the "payment stablecoin" label entirely.
Ethena's USDe, a delta-neutral synthetic dollar that holds no cash or Treasuries, peaked above $14 billion in supply during 2025 before a deleveraging event in October 2025 briefly pushed its peg to $0.97. The token now sits at roughly $5.9 billion in supply, according to DefiLlama, and pays stakers around 4% annualized through funding rate harvesting rather than issuer-paid yield. Because the backing is a hedged derivatives trade rather than fiat reserves, USDe does not meet the statutory definition of a payment stablecoin — and the GENIUS Act's yield prohibition never touches it.
In June 2026, Janus Henderson, with roughly $480 billion under management, partnered with Ethena to use USDe for treasury cash management and to fold its tokenized AAA credit product into USDe's reserves. The partnership shows that institutional demand for yield-bearing dollar instruments is migrating toward the synthetic dollar structure, even as regulators in other jurisdictions push back — Germany's BaFin forced Ethena to wind down its local entity and prohibited public sales of USDe.
What comes next
The OCC's March 2026 proposal would extend the yield ban to affiliates and third parties under a rebuttable presumption, targeting the Coinbase-style distribution deals that fund USDC rewards. Even that draft, however, aims at issuers paying yield through a side door — it does not obviously capture an instrument whose return comes from a market, not a balance sheet. The Treasury Department's separate April 2026 proposed rulemaking, which closed for comment June 2, focuses on determining when state-level regulatory regimes are "substantially similar" to the federal framework, leaving the synthetic dollar question unaddressed.
For Fidelity and State Street, the immediate opportunity is clear: the $315 billion stablecoin market needs compliant reserve vehicles, and the GENIUS Act has created a defined regulatory lane for money market funds to serve that demand. The open question is whether the next rulemaking draws a perimeter around synthetic dollars, or whether yield simply keeps migrating to whatever sits just outside the one Congress already drew.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.