Congress' current market structure deliberations will shape the next decade of U.S. financial innovation. I was in DC this week—my first trip in ~10 years. I even bought a new suit, so you know it’s serious. As the market structure bill comes together, parts of the GENIUS Act are being re-litigated, especially when and how stablecoin economics can be shared. Two things matter: 1. Issuers (like Bridge) must be able to share economics with developers (like Remitly, Dolar, Ramp). 2. Developers must be free to use those economics to build better products for consumers and businesses. Prescriptive regulation that restricts either will foreclose decades of innovation. If we regulated aviation based on the first gliders, we never would’ve built jets. This isn’t a “niche crypto issue.” We started Bridge because we believed stablecoins could be the next great financial platform. Stables could change the payments landscape much like cards have over the last 3 decades. And we’re just starting to see the green shoots. Our use cases include: • Remittance companies lowering the cost of sending money home • Enterprises like SpaceX simplifying treasury operations • AI platforms, like ScaleAI, paying people faster and globally • Global neobanks offering better ways to save and spend • Even the U.S. government disbursing aid with stablecoins The U.S. is leading the world in financial innovation. Let's keep it that way.