Brian Armstrong showed up at the Capitol on Thursday to stop what he saw as a direct hit on Coinbase’s business. His goal was clear: keep the company’s stablecoinBrian Armstrong showed up at the Capitol on Thursday to stop what he saw as a direct hit on Coinbase’s business. His goal was clear: keep the company’s stablecoin

Coinbase CEO showed up at the Capitol to stop what he saw as a direct hit on Coinbase’s business

2026/01/16 05:58
2 min di lettura
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Brian Armstrong showed up at the Capitol on Thursday to stop what he saw as a direct hit on Coinbase’s business. His goal was clear: keep the company’s stablecoin rewards alive.

Brian walked the halls himself, not sending anyone else, because a Senate committee was about to vote on a bill that could block the company from paying users rewards for holding stablecoins.

A day earlier, Brian had posted online slamming the bill. Within hours, Senate Banking Chair Tim Scott pulled it from the agenda. That single post stalled a bill that had been in the works for years.

Speaking to reporters, the Coinbase CEO said the company had several issues with the bill, but said “maybe the biggest” one was how bank lobbyists were trying to slip in rules that would shut down reward programs and make crypto platforms less competitive with banks.

Bankers pressure senators as Trump’s crypto law boosts stablecoin growth

Brian said it made no sense to keep pushing the bill forward when amendments were being considered that would kill reward payouts completely. He said he wanted lawmakers to go back and write something more balanced.

Stablecoins, which are tied to the dollar, have become a major business for companies like Coinbase. They’ve grown fast, especially after the GENIUS Act, signed into law by President Donald Trump last year, started rolling out. These rewards are profitable, and people like them. But banks don’t.

Bankers and their lobbyists have been hammering senators from both parties, asking them to ban rewards that look like interest. Their fear is simple: customers will yank their money out of banks that pay close to zero and move it into stablecoins that actually give returns.

If that happens, banks lose deposits. That hits their ability to give loans, especially to small businesses using local lenders.

One draft of the bill tried to compromise by banning yield but allowing other kinds of rewards, like ones tied to spending. But some senators weren’t having it. They were ready to vote on a full ban of all stablecoin rewards, not just yield. Brian didn’t want to sit back and watch.

The crypto industry was the biggest corporate donor in the 2023-2024 election cycle. Coinbase gave $1 million to Trump’s inauguration and is helping fund his White House ballroom project.

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