---
title: "Falcon Finance Launches fUSD Stablecoin With Anchorage"
date: 2026-05-27
author: "Kathleen Kinder"
featured_image: "https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/anchorage-and-falcon-launch-fusd-stablecoin.jpg"
categories:
  - name: "Cryptocurrency"
    url: "/crypto.md"
tags:
  - name: "News"
    url: "/tag/news.md"
---

# Falcon Finance Launches fUSD Stablecoin With Anchorage

Falcon Finance has launched fUSD, a new institutional stablecoin developed with Anchorage Digital Bank and Ceffu, aiming to deliver a compliant dollar-backed digital asset for regulated financial institutions.

## Key Takeaways

- Falcon Finance launched fUSD with Anchorage Digital Bank and Ceffu for institutional users.
- fUSD is backed by U.S. Treasury based reserves managed under a regulated banking framework.
- Eligible institutional holders may receive around 3% annual rewards through separate agreements with Falcon Finance.
- The stablecoin is designed to align with the GENIUS Act framework focused on compliant dollar backed digital assets.

## What Happened?

Falcon Finance announced the launch of **fUSD**, a new U.S. dollar-backed stablecoin created in partnership with **Anchorage Digital Bank** and institutional custody platform **Ceffu**. The stablecoin is built specifically for institutional users looking for compliant on chain settlement and treasury solutions.

According to the announcement, **fUSD is issued by Anchorage Digital Bank** and operates on Ceffu’s institutional infrastructure. Falcon Finance said the stablecoin is structured to comply with the proposed **GENIUS Act** framework while maintaining full reserve backing through U.S. Treasury related assets.

> fUSD is here.[@falconfinance](https://twitter.com/falconfinance?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw) ‘s new U.S. dollar-backed payment stablecoin is issued by Anchorage Digital Bank and built for institutional trading, collateral, and treasury workflows.  
>   
> More ↓ [pic.twitter.com/ObISOhit4I](https://t.co/ObISOhit4I)
> 
> — Anchorage Digital ⚓️ (@Anchorage) [May 27, 2026](https://twitter.com/Anchorage/status/2059621633506381998?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw)

 ## Falcon Finance Targets Institutional Stablecoin Market

The launch of fUSD highlights the growing race among crypto companies to build regulated stablecoin products tailored for institutions. Falcon Finance positioned fUSD as an institutional grade payment and settlement asset rather than a retail focused yield product.

The company said reserves backing fUSD are composed of **high quality U.S. Treasury securities and cash equivalent instruments** held under Anchorage’s regulated banking structure. [Anchorage Digital Bank](https://coinlaw.io/anchorage-digital-statistics/) manages the minting and redemption process while reserve assets remain in traditional custody accounts.

Falcon Finance added that Deloitte will provide **monthly reserve attestations**, giving institutional users additional transparency into reserve management.

Falcon Finance co-founder Andrei Grachev said:

“

Institutional investors want dollar denominated assets that meet regulatory requirements while still offering a return. fUSD is an institutional dollar product issued by a federally chartered U.S. bank and managed with reserves based on U.S. Treasuries.

Andrei GrachevCo-founder – Falcon Finance





Anchorage Digital co-founder and CEO **Nathan McCauley** also emphasized the institutional focus behind the stablecoin launch. He said Falcon Finance is building the product within the evolving U.S. regulatory framework.

## fUSD Uses Non Yielding Stablecoin Structure

A major feature of **fUSD** is its non yielding structure. The stablecoin itself does not directly pay interest or yield to token holders despite generating returns from underlying reserve assets.

This design appears intended to align with the proposed [GENIUS Act framework](https://coinlaw.io/genius-act-stablecoin-approval-framework/), which places restrictions on stablecoin issuers offering direct interest payments to users. Instead, Falcon Finance plans to provide rewards separately through bilateral agreements with qualified institutional holders.

The company said eligible institutions could receive approximately **3% annual rewards** tied to the economic returns generated from **fUSD reserves**. Falcon Finance clarified these rewards are provided directly by the company and not by Anchorage or Ceffu.

By separating rewards from the stablecoin issuance itself, Falcon Finance appears to be positioning fUSD as a compliant digital cash rail rather than an investment product that could attract securities related scrutiny.

## Ceffu Infrastructure Expands Institutional Access

The launch on **Ceffu’s custody and staking infrastructure** gives fUSD immediate access to institutional digital asset management tools already used by trading firms and large crypto investors.

Ceffu provides segregated institutional wallets, [custody services](https://coinlaw.io/crypto-custody-regulations/) and operational tools that support treasury management, settlement and digital asset financing. Falcon Finance said this infrastructure allows institutions to integrate fUSD into existing workflows while maintaining compliance focused controls.

Falcon Finance also revealed that it plans to allocate a portion of its own corporate reserves into fUSD from launch day. The company said this move demonstrates confidence in the stablecoin’s structure and long term stability.

## CoinLaw’s Takeaway

In my experience, the [stablecoin market](https://coinlaw.io/algorithmic-stablecoins-statistics/) is clearly moving toward a more regulated and institution focused future. I found Falcon Finance’s approach interesting because the company is not trying to compete with high yield retail crypto products. Instead, it is leaning heavily into compliance, transparency and traditional financial structures.

The partnership with Anchorage Digital Bank gives fUSD stronger credibility compared to many smaller stablecoin projects entering the market today. If regulators continue pushing for stricter stablecoin rules in the U.S., products like fUSD could become more attractive to banks, hedge funds and institutional crypto firms looking for safer blockchain-based dollar settlement options.

Definition of Staking. Link to full glossary entry follows the description.**Staking**Staking is the process of locking cryptocurrency in a proof-of-stake network to help validate transactions and earn rewards, replacing energy-intensive mining.

[Read more](https://coinlaw.io/glossary/staking/)