đ Ethereum Surges 6% Against Bitcoin as GENUIS Act Ignites Yield-Bearing Stablecoin Frenzy
Ethereum flexes its muscles with a 6% rally against Bitcoinâjust as Washington's GENUIS Act turns up the heat on yield-bearing stablecoins. Cue the regulatory theater.
The Catalyst: Policy meets price action. The GENUIS Act isnât just bureaucratic noiseâitâs a flashing neon sign pointing at the next crypto battleground: interest-generating stablecoins. And ETH? Itâs riding the wave.
Why It Matters: When lawmakers start name-dropping "yield," the market listens. Whether thatâs a good thing depends on how much you trust politicians to understand DeFi before they try to tame it.
The Punchline: Nothing unites crypto like a mix of green candles and vague legislation. Happy tradingâjust donât say you werenât warned when the next "stable" coin cracks under pressure.

Thielen added that the GENUIS Act has put the spotlight on Ethena's $5 billion synthetic dollar USDe, which achieves delta-hedging or cash and carry arbitrage by shorting perpetual futures equivalent to the amount of ETH received from users as collateral. That's how it generates yield on USDe.
The long-prevailing theory is that the shorting operation adds to bearish pressures in the futures market and caps basis, the gap between futures and spot prices.
"Ethena currently represents about 4% of Ethereumâs $26 billion open interest, and by consistently selling futures, it has exerted downward pressure on ETH prices," Thielen said.
Ethena has already reached out to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to seek clarity on synthetic dollars, such as the USDe. The team reportedly argued that the synthetic dollar functions as a payment instrument rather than a security and falls outside the scope of the GENUIS Act and the STABLE Act, which regulate payment stablecoin issuers.
Ethena is headquartered in Lisbon, Portugal, with new dollar inflows primarily coming from outside the U.S. So, it remains to be seen how it fits the evolving regulatory picture in the U.S.
"If Ethena were to comply with the U.S. stablecoin bill, it could be forced to stop buying ethereum altogether. However, the market may be interpreting this dynamic differentlyâENA-USDT continues to rally, supported by rising Ethereum funding rates," Thielen said.
The GENIUS Act, which got the Senate approval in June with bipartisan support, is expected to head for a floor vote in the House by Thursday.