Walmart Amazon Explore Stablecoins as Senate Votes on GENIUS Act

Coin WorldFriday, Jun 13, 2025 2:01 pm ET
1min read

Walmart and

are exploring the possibility of launching their own stablecoins, digital currencies backed by U.S. dollars or Treasuries, as the U.S. Senate advances legislation that would establish a federal regulatory framework for privately issued digital dollars. The legislation, known as the GENIUS Act, has passed committee and cleared cloture, with a final Senate vote scheduled for June 17.

Both retailers are evaluating the feasibility of issuing stablecoins, although they have not made formal announcements or filed license applications. Internal teams at

and Amazon are assessing technology partners and compliance paths, with a primary incentive being cost reduction. Card processing fees, which range between 1% and 3%, result in an estimated $14 billion in annual costs for Walmart and Amazon. A 1% reduction in these fees would translate to roughly $1 billion in annual EBITDA gains for Walmart, with Amazon's payment volume positioning it for comparable benefits.

The GENIUS Act, sponsored by Sen. Bill Hagerty, aims to formalize reserve standards, consumer protections, and operational rules for payment stablecoins. It mandates 100% backing by cash or short-term Treasuries, monthly reserve disclosures, and prioritization of token holders in bankruptcy proceedings. Issuers operating above $10 billion would face both state and federal oversight. The bill has bipartisan support, with Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand and Sen. Cynthia Lummis framing it as a mechanism to protect consumers while enabling innovation and preserving the dollar’s global role.

Retailer interest in the stablecoin space coincides with increasing support among payment providers for regulated tokenized dollars. According to a recent survey, 85% of such firms now view clear legislation as a green light for adoption. The convergence of retail and financial infrastructure interest has prompted major U.S. banks to begin exploring their own joint stablecoin project to maintain a presence in settlement layers.

The GENIUS Act represents a marked shift in Washington’s approach following the demise of Facebook’s Diem project. While Diem faced opposition over monetary policy concerns and corporate control, GENIUS is deliberately narrower. It avoids algorithmic assets, imposes full-reserve backing, and focuses strictly on payment functionality. These constraints appear designed to provide a politically viable path for private sector innovation without ceding monetary sovereignty.

Walmart and Amazon’s potential entry into the stablecoin space would mark the first time retail giants issue digital dollars under an explicit federal rulebook. Their consumer base and transaction scale could rapidly accelerate adoption, with checkout stablecoin usage becoming common in e-commerce and supply chain payments. The Senate’s upcoming vote on June 17 will determine whether the GENIUS framework becomes law, setting the stage for retailer-issued digital dollars to move from internal planning to operational design.