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  • As CLARITY Stalls, the Stablecoin Yield Fight Is Deciding Whether Dollar Tokens Act Like Cash or Deposits
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As CLARITY Stalls, the Stablecoin Yield Fight Is Deciding Whether Dollar Tokens Act Like Cash or Deposits

admin 3 weeks ago 6 minutes read 0 comments
Traders at a cryptocurrency exchange floor monitoring stablecoin prices and market data on multiple screens.

The CLARITY Act is stuck on a narrow issue with outsized consequences: whether stablecoins can pay yield. That is not a side dispute. It is the line between treating dollar-backed tokens as payment rails or letting them evolve into bank-like products that compete for savings balances, and both Congress and regulators are now moving around that distinction.

The dispute is over product identity, not just a 4% reward

Banks have pushed hard to block passive rewards on stablecoin holdings, arguing that yield-bearing tokens could pull deposits from traditional accounts, especially at regional and community banks. Their case is not simply anti-crypto. It is tied to funding structure: low-cost deposits support bank lending, and a token that offers transferability plus a 3.5% to 4% return starts to look less like a payment tool and more like a substitute for bank savings.

That directly affects crypto venues that have built user activity and treasury economics around those balances. Coinbase, Kraken, and Gemini all rely on stablecoin programs as both a liquidity anchor and a revenue source. Remove the yield layer and the token may still function for trading, transfers, and settlement, but it becomes less sticky on exchanges and less attractive as an idle cash instrument. The policy question is therefore also a market-structure question: where stablecoin balances sit, how long they stay there, and who captures the income from them.

Why CLARITY stalled even though many in crypto want the bill

The Senate negotiations around the CLARITY Act have exposed divisions inside the digital-asset industry rather than a clean crypto-versus-banks split. Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong has opposed earlier compromises that would sharply limit yield features, arguing that a bill marketed as market-structure clarity should not preemptively eliminate an important stablecoin use case. Other crypto stakeholders have been more willing to accept tighter restrictions if that secures legal definitions and a workable federal framework for the rest of the market.

That split matters because the trade-off is real. A bill that passes with strict yield limits may help custodians, token issuers, and trading platforms by reducing classification uncertainty, but it would also cap one of the clearest distribution advantages stablecoins have over bank deposits. A bill that preserves broader reward structures may better support exchange liquidity and onchain cash management, but it faces stronger opposition from banking groups and a higher risk of dying in Congress. The current impasse reflects that neither side sees yield language as a minor drafting point.

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The OCC is preparing a fallback if Congress does not settle it

Even if legislators continue to deadlock, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency is already signaling where federal supervision could land. Under proposed interpretations tied to the GENIUS Act framework, the OCC would treat not only direct interest payments from issuers as prohibited, but also indirect yield routed through affiliates or third parties. That closes a common workaround and suggests regulators do not want stablecoin economics rebuilt through distribution partners after a formal ban.

For the market, this is the practical checkpoint. The legislative fight determines the headline, but rulemaking determines the operating perimeter. If the final federal approach bars indirect rewards, platforms may still advertise utility, faster transfers, and integration benefits, yet the simple “hold dollars here and earn” pitch becomes much harder to sustain. If the language leaves room for narrowly structured incentives, exchanges and wallet providers may still preserve reward-like programs without calling them issuer interest. The difference will come down to definitions, not rhetoric.

Where the business model pressure is showing up now

The companies most exposed are not exposed in the same way. Circle’s regulated position gives USDC policy relevance, but also makes the business sensitive to any rule that narrows yield-related distribution. USDC has about $75.3 billion in circulation, and uncertainty over how regulated issuers can support user returns has fed into wider scrutiny of Circle’s stablecoin economics. Tether, by contrast, remains much larger at roughly $184 billion in USDT outstanding and is responding to the regulatory climate through transparency signaling, including the start of a full audit process with a Big Four accounting firm.

Those moves point to a distinction investors should keep in view: transparency and scale are not substitutes for permissive product design. A larger issuer can still lose ground in regulated channels if reward structures are constrained, and a more transparent issuer does not automatically gain if the law defines stablecoins narrowly as payment instruments. The winner under a no-yield regime may simply be the token with the strongest distribution in trading and settlement, not the one that can best market itself as digital cash with extra return.

How to read the next phase without reducing it to bank lobbying

The useful lens is not whether banks or crypto firms “win.” It is which stablecoin functions remain legal after Congress and agencies draw the line. The table below is a faster way to separate signal from narrative.

Checkpoint If yield is tightly restricted If limited rewards remain possible
CLARITY Act final language Stablecoins are pushed toward payment and settlement use Some platforms keep cash-management style features
OCC rulemaking under GENIUS-related interpretation Indirect rewards via affiliates may also be blocked Carefully structured third-party incentives may survive
Exchange liquidity impact Idle balances become less sticky, pressuring revenue Exchanges retain a stronger user acquisition tool
Banking-sector response Deposit competition is reduced, especially for smaller banks Pressure on deposit franchises remains a live concern
Signal to watch Explicit bans on affiliate or third-party reward flows Exceptions for promotional, platform, or non-issuer incentives

The immediate watchpoints are straightforward: final CLARITY Act language on yield and the OCC’s eventual treatment of indirect compensation. If those both narrow sharply, the market should stop valuing stablecoins as future bank alternatives and start valuing them as regulated transaction infrastructure. If either leaves room for rewards, then exchange-linked stablecoin balances may remain an important source of liquidity and fee generation.

Short Q&A

Is this just a fight between banks and crypto?
No. Crypto firms are split between preserving yield-based distribution and securing a broader bill even if yield is curtailed.

Why do indirect rewards matter so much?
Because a ban on direct issuer interest is easier to bypass unless regulators also define affiliate and third-party payments as prohibited substitutes.

What is the cleanest market signal from here?
Whether lawmakers and the OCC classify stablecoins primarily as payment instruments. If they do, yield programs will likely be the first feature cut back.

Related Coverage
Stablecoin Reward Ban Debate Intensifies as Clarity Act Stalls
Market structure bill compromise draws wide-ranging reaction from fractured crypto crowd

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