The joint statement outlines a blueprint where stablecoins functioning as money must maintain a one-to-one reserve ratio using high-quality liquid assets. Officials insist that issuers keep these reserves segregated from corporate funds to ensure that holders maintain priority claims during insolvency proceedings. By pursuing "comparable outcomes for comparable risks," the two nations intend to avoid the regulatory fragmentation that currently complicates international digital asset operations.
While the agreement does not mandate identical legislation, it establishes a path for mutual market access. Regulators plan to explore how a stablecoin approved in one country might operate in the other, provided it satisfies domestic safeguards. This coordination extends to tokenized finance, with the SEC, CFTC, FCA, and the Bank of England collaborating on standards for tokenized securities settlement and the use of digital money market funds as collateral. A private-sector pilot program will test these cross-border applications over the coming year to assess practical implementation.

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