CLARITY Act debates over who may pay stablecoin yield—banks, issuers or intermediaries—could shift deposits from community banks, analysts and advisers say.CLARITY Act debates over who may pay stablecoin yield—banks, issuers or intermediaries—could shift deposits from community banks, analysts and advisers say.

Stablecoins face yield rules as CLARITY Act spurs bank fight

2026/02/16 19:58
4 min di lettura
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Current drafts seek to curb issuer and intermediary stablecoin yield

The fight over the CLARITY Act has narrowed to a pivotal question: who is allowed to pay Americans for holding “digital dollars.” Behind closed doors, the debate has become a proxy war between banks and crypto platforms over stablecoin rewards and interest, according to CryptoSlate. The core policy choice is whether yield can be paid by the stablecoin issuer, by intermediaries such as exchanges, or only by insured banks.

Draft language circulating in Washington has tilted toward restricting both issuer-paid interest and intermediary “rewards” that function like interest, as reported by American Banker. That approach would align stablecoin treatment more closely with bank deposit conventions and tighten the perimeter around who can distribute dollar yield at retail scale. The details matter because a ban on intermediary rewards would reach beyond issuers and reshape crypto platform business models.

Policymakers are also framing the issue through a stability lens. Protecting community banks and minimizing “deposit volatility” have been recurring themes in official testimony, according to the U.S. Treasury. Any final text that narrows who may transmit or pass through yield is being weighed against its potential to reduce flighty funding and to keep core retail liquidity inside the regulated banking system.

Why this matters: deposit flight and competition stakes

Community lenders warn that even modest stablecoin rewards could pull rate-sensitive deposits from local banks toward crypto platforms, weakening loan capacity where it is most needed. Those concerns underpin calls to explicitly bar exchanges and other nonbanks from offering yield or yield-like rewards on stablecoin balances, according to the Independent Community Bankers of America (ICBA). The proposed curbs are therefore not only about consumer protection; they are also about preserving the funding base of smaller banks.

There is a counterview that stablecoins can coexist with banks without triggering dangerous outflows. Some analysts argue deposit-flight fears are overstated and that policy can address risks without stifling innovation, as reported by Bitcoin.com. How lawmakers reconcile these perspectives will shape whether rewards are treated as a payments-adjacent feature or as an investment-like benefit requiring bank intermediation.

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Industry leaders contend that restricting rewards would entrench incumbents and deny consumers fair access to dollar yield. “The current Senate draft is worse than no bill,” said Brian Armstrong, CEO of Coinbase, criticizing limits on stablecoin rewards as anticompetitive, as reported by CryptoCapitalNews. The competition stakes are straightforward: if nonbank intermediaries cannot share yield on dollar reserves, banks gain structural advantage and crypto platforms lose a key differentiator.

At the time of this writing, market context underscores how policy headlines and business-model uncertainty intersect with listed crypto firms. Coinbase Global (COIN) last closed at 141.09 USD and indicated 149.60 USD pre-market on a delayed basis, based on data from Nasdaq. These figures are provided for context only and may reflect delayed quotes.

How stablecoin rewards work across issuers, intermediaries, and banks

In practice, “stablecoin rewards” can come from two places: the issuer or the intermediary. Issuers that hold high-quality liquid assets such as short-term Treasuries may choose to share some reserve income with holders, while intermediaries may offer “rewards” that are economically similar to interest even if paid from platform revenues, as reported by American Banker. The policy question is whether either or both sources should be permitted to compensate retail holders for parking dollars on-chain.

Banks enter the picture because they can pair deposit-taking with digital-asset interfaces. The White House’s crypto adviser, known publicly as Witt, has said banks can offer stablecoin products to their own customers just as crypto platforms do, as reported by CoinMarketCap Academy. If lawmakers confine stablecoin yield to the banking channel, rewards could persist as pass-through benefits inside bank-led products while being curtailed at nonbank issuers and exchanges.

Disclaimer: The information provided in this article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, legal, or trading advice. Cryptocurrency markets are highly volatile and involve risk. Readers should conduct their own research and consult with a qualified professional before making any investment decisions. The publisher is not responsible for any losses incurred as a result of reliance on the information contained herein.
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