The American Bankers Association’s Community Bankers Council sent a letter to the US Senate this week calling for changes to the GENIUS Act. The group wants to close what they describe as a loophole in the stablecoin law.
The GENIUS Act passed in 2024 banned stablecoin issuers from paying interest directly to token holders. Lawmakers agreed with banks that yield-bearing stablecoins could compete with traditional savings accounts.
However, crypto exchanges found a workaround. Platforms like Coinbase and Kraken now offer rewards to users who hold certain stablecoins on their exchanges.
The Community Bankers Council represents more than 200 community bank leaders across the country. They say this practice threatens their banks’ core business model.
“Some companies have exploited a perceived loophole allowing stablecoin issuers to indirectly fund payments to stablecoin holders through digital asset exchanges and other partners,” the council wrote in their letter.
Community banks use customer deposits to fund loans for local businesses and residents. The council argues that if deposits flow to yield-bearing stablecoins instead, their ability to lend will suffer.
The group wants Congress to ban affiliates and partners of stablecoin issuers from offering interest. They hope the restriction will be included in broader crypto market structure legislation currently moving through Congress.
This letter is part of a larger push by banking groups to revise the GENIUS Act. The Banking Policy Institute led earlier efforts to close the same loophole.
In August, the institute sent a letter to lawmakers warning of massive deposit outflows. The group, headed by JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon, estimated that $6.6 trillion could leave the traditional banking system.
ABA President Rob Nichols said in an email to bank CEOs that trillions of dollars could be diverted from banks. He urged lawmakers to understand the risks to local communities.
Two major crypto advocacy organizations responded to the banking industry’s concerns. The Crypto Council for Innovation and the Blockchain Association sent their own letter to the Senate Banking Committee in August.
These groups argued that payment stablecoins are not used to fund loans. They said the proposed changes would limit innovation and reduce consumer options.
The Blockchain Association said independent analysis shows no disproportionate deposit outflows linked to stablecoin adoption. The group noted that banks currently hold trillions in reserves at the Federal Reserve rather than deploying them as loans.
The organization warned that preventing platforms from offering rewards would “weaken competition across payments and financial services, undermine regulatory clarity, and reopen a settled law.”
Senators are meeting on Tuesday to discuss comprehensive crypto regulation legislation, according to PunchBowl News. The treatment of yield-bearing stablecoins could be addressed in that bill.
The post Community Banks Request GENIUS Act Amendment to Block Stablecoin Yield appeared first on CoinCentral.


