Skip to content
cryptoclashzone_logo

Primary Menu
  • Home
  • Market Signals
  • Crypto Economy
  • Deep Analysis
  • AI & Automation
  • Guides & Strategies
  • Exchanges
  • Regulation
Light/Dark Button
  • Home
  • Regulation
  • Coinbase’s Fight Over the CLARITY Act Is Really About Who Gets to Pay Stablecoin Yield
  • Regulation

Coinbase’s Fight Over the CLARITY Act Is Really About Who Gets to Pay Stablecoin Yield

admin 3 weeks ago 6 minutes read 0 comments
A cryptocurrency exchange floor showing traders working at desks with multiple monitors displaying stablecoin market data.

Coinbase’s rejection of the latest CLARITY Act draft is not just a crypto-versus-banks dispute. The real fault line is between two different stablecoin businesses: issuers such as Circle, which earn reserve income, and distributors such as Coinbase, which use yield-sharing and customer rewards to attract balances.

The bill targets distribution-layer yield, not the reserve machine underneath it

The current draft would ban “direct or indirect” stablecoin yield payments while still allowing activity-based rewards that are not economically equivalent to interest. That distinction goes to the center of Coinbase’s objection, because a rewards program tied to simply holding USDC can look very different from a payment for spending, transacting, or using a platform, yet the draft leaves room for regulators to decide where that line sits.

That matters because Circle and Coinbase are exposed in different ways. Circle earns income by investing USDC reserves in short-term U.S. Treasurys and other permitted backing assets, but it does not pass that yield through directly to token holders. Coinbase, by contrast, has used USDC rewards as a customer acquisition and retention tool, including a 3.5% yield on USDC balances, so a ban on interest-like payouts hits the distributor economics more directly than the issuer economics.

Why Coinbase pushed back so hard

The financial incentive is plain. Coinbase reported $1.35 billion in stablecoin-related revenue in 2025, largely from its USDC relationship with Circle, which makes stablecoin balances more than a side product inside the exchange business.

For Coinbase, vague drafting is not a secondary concern; it is the whole issue. If “indirect” yield or “economically equivalent” rewards are defined broadly in the Senate’s final language, regulators could treat common crypto reward structures as disguised interest even when companies redesign them around engagement, payments, or platform use. That would narrow one of the clearest ways exchanges have kept dollar-backed crypto competitive with bank deposits and money market products.

More From This Topic
Dubai’s KuCoin Crackdown: A Crucial Shift in Cryptocurrency Regulation and Investor Protection
Dubai’s KuCoin Crackdown: A Crucial Shift in Cryptocurrency Regulation and Investor Protection
Overview of VARA’s Enforcement Action The Dubai Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority (VARA) has mandated that KuCoin halt all


Dubai’s KuCoin Crackdown: A Crucial Shift in Cryptocurrency Regulation and Investor Protection

Dubai’s KuCoin Crackdown: A Crucial Shift in Cryptocurrency Regulation and Investor Protection

Not simply bank protectionism

It is easy to frame the yield ban as a move to shield banks from crypto competition, but that reading is too thin. Banking groups do have a concrete reason to support restrictions: some forecasts point to deposit outflows of as much as $500 billion across developed markets by 2028 if stablecoins offering attractive yields gain traction. From a regulatory standpoint, that is not only a competitive issue but also a funding and supervision issue, because insured bank deposits and tokenized dollar balances do not sit under the same rules.

That does not mean the bill lands evenly across crypto. Bernstein analysts have highlighted the legal and economic split between issuers and distributors in the CLARITY Act’s scope. In practice, a reserve-income model like Circle’s may remain largely intact while the customer-facing distribution model gets squeezed, which is why calling the proposal “anti-stablecoin” misses the more precise effect: it may preserve stablecoin issuance while reducing the ways platforms can share the economics with users.

Issue Issuer model (Circle) Distributor model (Coinbase)
Main revenue source Reserve income from backing assets such as short-term Treasurys User balances, platform activity, and yield-sharing tied to USDC distribution
Direct exposure to yield ban Lower, if reserve income stays at issuer level Higher, because customer rewards can be treated as interest-like payments
Regulatory pressure point Reserve management and backing compliance Whether rewards are “direct or indirect” yield or “economically equivalent” to interest
Likely adaptation Continue reserve-income model if bill language stays narrow Shift toward transaction incentives, fee rebates, or usage-based rewards

The next real checkpoint is the Senate language, not the latest headline move

The legislative stall matters because Coinbase’s opposition has made passage harder, but the key market question is narrower: how the Senate’s final draft defines rewards that are “economically equivalent” to interest. Until that text is released, traders and project teams are mostly arguing over hypothetical enforcement paths rather than a settled rulebook.

That uncertainty already has market effects. Shares of Coinbase fell below $200 and Circle also dropped sharply as investors reassessed how much of the USDC ecosystem depends on distributors being able to pass some economics to users. If the final draft leaves room for engagement-based rewards, the hit may be manageable. If the definitions sweep broadly enough to capture most balance-based incentives, then USDC distribution economics could reset even if stablecoin issuance keeps expanding through payments, treasury use, and cross-border settlement.

A practical filter for reading the next draft

Readers trying to separate signal from narrative should focus on whether the law regulates holding a stablecoin, using a stablecoin, or issuing a stablecoin. Those are three different activities, and the answer will determine whether the CLARITY Act mainly caps retail reward programs, reshapes exchange monetization, or reaches further into stablecoin market structure.

There is also a timing constraint. Lawmakers including Senator Cynthia Lummis have pushed for compromise, while the window before the November mid-term elections makes a full resolution less certain. That means the most important near-term indicator is not political rhetoric from either side but the exact wording around indirect yield, permissible activity-based rewards, and who counts as the regulated party.

Short Q&A

Does this automatically damage Circle?
Not in the same way. Circle’s reserve-income model may remain intact if the bill focuses on customer-facing yield distribution rather than issuer reserve earnings.

Why is Coinbase more exposed?
Because its USDC strategy depends in part on rewarding users for holding balances, and that is the behavior the draft is trying to fence off when it resembles deposit interest.

What should investors watch next?
The Senate’s final release of the CLARITY Act language, especially how it defines “economically equivalent” rewards and whether usage-based incentives are clearly carved out.

Related Coverage
Coinbase Rejects the Clarity Act Draft as Stablecoin Yield Fight Escalates
CLARITY Act Faces Setback as Coinbase Opposes Stablecoin Yield Compromise

About the Author

admin

Administrator

Visit Website View All Posts

Post navigation

Previous: Nvidia’s Crypto Lawsuit Is Not About Perfect Data, but Whether Investors Were Kept in the Dark
Next: If Binance Liquidity Arrives, Tether Gold on BNB Chain Becomes More Than a Gold Proxy

Related Stories

A group of professionals working around computer screens showing financial and event contract data in a modern office setting.
  • Regulation

If federal market structure holds, High Roller’s Crypto.com deal is a real U.S. prediction markets entry—not just a betting add-on

admin 2 days ago 0
A crypto ATM technician servicing a Bitcoin kiosk on a city street with people walking nearby during the day.
  • Regulation

Bitcoin Depot’s March Hack Matters If You Rely on Public Crypto Custodians to Secure the Last Mile

admin 1 week ago 0
A group of professionals discussing cryptocurrency market trends around a table with laptops and charts in a modern office.
  • Regulation

Milei’s LIBRA Calls Shift the Case From Bad Promotion to Possible Coordination

admin 1 week ago 0

Recent Posts

  • Bitwise’s Avalanche ETF Is Not a Plain AVAX Tracker: BAVA Adds Staking Yield but Keeps a Liquidity Buffer
  • If federal market structure holds, High Roller’s Crypto.com deal is a real U.S. prediction markets entry—not just a betting add-on
  • ETHGas Is Turning Ethereum Blockspace Into a Forward Market, Not Just a Faster Mempool
  • Trump Meme Coin Gala’s VIP Cutoff Fell to $300,000, and That Is the Real Signal
  • Bitcoin Depot’s March Hack Matters If You Rely on Public Crypto Custodians to Secure the Last Mile

Recent Comments

No comments to show.

Archives

  • April 2026
  • March 2026
  • February 2026

Categories

  • AI & Automation
  • Crypto Economy
  • Deep Analysis
  • Exchanges
  • Guides & Strategies
  • Market Signals
  • Regulation

You May Have Missed

A trader at a cryptocurrency trading desk with multiple screens showing AVAX price charts and market data in a modern office.
  • Crypto Economy

Bitwise’s Avalanche ETF Is Not a Plain AVAX Tracker: BAVA Adds Staking Yield but Keeps a Liquidity Buffer

admin 2 days ago 0
A group of professionals working around computer screens showing financial and event contract data in a modern office setting.
  • Regulation

If federal market structure holds, High Roller’s Crypto.com deal is a real U.S. prediction markets entry—not just a betting add-on

admin 2 days ago 0
A cryptocurrency trading floor with traders monitoring Ethereum blockchain data and gas fee charts on multiple large screens.
  • Crypto Economy

ETHGas Is Turning Ethereum Blockspace Into a Forward Market, Not Just a Faster Mempool

admin 2 days ago 0
Attendees at a cryptocurrency conference viewing token price charts and leaderboards on digital devices and screens.
  • Market Signals

Trump Meme Coin Gala’s VIP Cutoff Fell to $300,000, and That Is the Real Signal

admin 2 days ago 0
Copyright © 2026 All rights reserved. | ReviewNews by AF themes.