Stablecoins face yield dispute as CLARITY Act talks stall

Stablecoins face yield dispute as CLARITY Act talks stall

White House mediates CLARITY Act (H.R. 3633) stablecoin yield dispute

The White House is set to hold another meeting in an effort to break the stalemate over whether payment stablecoin holders may receive interest-like “stablecoin yield and rewards” and, if so, who may pay it. According to CryptoSlate, talks have centered on whether banks, regulated issuers, or affiliated platforms can compensate users for simply holding dollar‑pegged tokens under the CLARITY Act H.R. 3633.

The bill would divide core digital‑asset oversight between the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, shaping where and how stablecoin programs are supervised. As summarized by DeFiRate, that split is one reason yield policy has become the pivotal design choice for payment stablecoins under the proposal.

Process‑wise, Senate Banking activity remains on hold while the parties pursue a compromise on yield. Cryptovalley Journal has described White House‑mediated talks with an end‑February to March 1 window for a joint proposal on permissible rewards programs.

Banks seek ban on yield to prevent deposit outflows

Banking trade groups argue that allowing yield or rewards tied to the mere holding of payment stablecoins could trigger bank deposit outflows and weaken community lending. Based on figures cited by Crypto‑Economy, the Independent Community Bankers of America has floated a scenario in which as much as $1.3 trillion of deposits could migrate under permissive designs, and the groups prefer a statutory ban on interest, yield, or rewards.

From a prudential perspective, their case turns on the funding model of banks: retail and small‑business deposits support credit creation, and rapid displacement into nonbank instruments can stress liquidity. In this reading, prohibiting yield at exchanges, issuers, and affiliates would blunt incentives to exit insured deposit accounts while regulators assess systemic effects.

ICBA’s leadership has pressed lawmakers to close any loopholes that would let intermediaries rebadge interest as points or cash‑back on stablecoin balances. “Congress should fully prohibit crypto exchanges, affiliated companies, and other intermediaries, not just issuers, from paying interest, yield, or rewards on payment stablecoin holdings,” said Rebeca Romero Rainey, President & CEO of the Independent Community Bankers of America.

Crypto industry warns bans drive users offshore, stifle innovation

Industry participants counter that an outright ban would disadvantage compliant U.S. products and push users toward offshore or synthetic‑dollar instruments beyond U.S. oversight. According to Cointelegraph’s interviews with market analysts, prohibitions on regulated stablecoin yields could fragment liquidity and shift activity to less transparent venues.

In the current debate, “yield” spans several constructs: interest paid by an issuer or affiliate on custodial stablecoin balances; non‑cash rewards such as points or rebates for holding; and pass‑through of third‑party returns from money‑market‑like exposures. Policymakers are weighing whether to allow any of these forms, cap or disclose them, confine them to banks, or ban them altogether.

Some large U.S. platforms frame the fight as undue deference to bank lobbying that would foreclose mainstream utility for digital dollars. “We’d rather have no bill than a bad bill” that “kills rewards on stablecoins,” said Brian Armstrong, CEO of Coinbase.

At the time of this writing, based on data from Yahoo Finance, Coinbase Global (COIN) last traded around $166.00 in after‑hours on February 13 following a $164.32 regular‑session close that was up roughly 16% on the day. These figures are provided for context and do not imply any view on the company or the bill’s prospects.

Disclaimer:

The content on The CCPress is provided for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry inherent risks. Please consult a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions.
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