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The CLARITY Act (Crypto Market Structure Act) negotiations in the US Senate are stalled due to a debate over whether yield-bearing stablecoins should be paid. Banks are demanding a complete ban, viewing yield-bearing stablecoins as a "deposit flight," while the crypto sector considers it a major obstacle to innovation and global competition. This debate will directly determine the future of the $281 billion stablecoin market.
Brief Background
The GENIUS Act, passed in 2025, imposed a direct yield ban on payment-oriented stablecoins. However, by 2026, yield-bearing models (like Ethereum USDe) had doubled the market. Banks predict a deposit loss of $182-908 billion by 2030, calling it "regulatory arbitrage."
Positions of the Parties
👉Banks:
Yield competes with traditional savings accounts and creates systemic risk. The American Bankers Association is demanding a complete ban.
👉Crypto Sector:
According to Coinbase, Circle, and Brian Armstrong, a ban would leave the US behind China and Europe. Yield increases liquidity and accelerates user adoption. "Anti-consumer and anti-innovation" backlash is growing.
Current Situation (March 2026)
- The Senate Banking Committee is discussing a ban on passive yield and limited permission for transaction-based rewards in closed-door meetings.
- The White House is seeking a compromise.
- Yield-bearing stablecoins have grown 10 times faster than the total market in the last 6 months (APY 4-8%).
The discussion summarizes the question of whether stablecoins will be "just a means of payment" or "yield-generating digital dollars."
🤔If a ban is implemented: US exports will slow, innovation will flee to Asia.
🤔 If a compromise is reached: A hybrid model with limited yield + transaction rewards will emerge; both stability and competition will prevail.
Conclusion
#StablecoinDeYieldDebateIntensifies represents a power struggle between Wall Street and crypto. Congress is expected to reach a compromise by May. Otherwise, both the US and global crypto markets will face uncertainty. A delicate balance remains between opportunities for consumers and systemic risks.
This development is not just an objection from one company; it creates a new and critical impasse in the Digital Asset Market CLARITY Act process, which has been moving forward with great hopes for months. Optimism peaked last week with Senator Cynthia Lummis’s statement that “99% resolved, bipartisan compromise coming soon.” Now, Coinbase’s resistance is jeopardizing the bill’s markup process in the Senate Banking Committee.
🕵️What Did the Compromise Propose, and Why Was Coinbase Against It?
The latest text prepared by the Tillis-Alsobrooks duo aimed to tighten stablecoin rewards to prevent "deposit flight," the biggest fear of banks:
- It completely banned balance-based yields,
- It treated all "economically equivalent" rewards like bank interest,
- It only allowed limited rewards based on active use or transactions.
Coinbase, however, argues that this language is too vague and restrictive. The company states that the annual rewards of around 3.5-4% it offers on stablecoins like USDC (approximately $1.35 billion in revenue in 2025) will be severely reduced, users will be deprived of these incentives, and innovation will be undermined. According to Coinbase, despite its claim to "protect innovation," the proposal actually puts crypto platforms at a disadvantage compared to traditional banks.
This is Coinbase's second major objection. In January 2026, a similar compromise led to the withdrawal of support and a postponement of the markup. Now, the division within the sector is deepening: some crypto companies are saying "let's compromise to save the law," while Coinbase and a few other big players want "clear rules without compromise."
Market Reaction and Time Pressure
Following the news, Coinbase (COIN) and Circle (CRCL) shares fell sharply. Analysts estimate that the probability of the CLARITY Act passing this year has fallen to 61%. The Senate Banking Committee markup, targeted for the end of April, is once again in jeopardy. With the congressional calendar tightening before the 2026 midterm elections, every delay reduces the chances of the law passing.
Senator Lummis' warning that "we can't wait until 2030" remains on the table. However, the banking lobby (ICBA, JPMorgan, Bank of America) continues to argue that stablecoin yields could attract trillions of dollars in deposits. Coinbase, on the other hand, emphasizes that these rewards strengthen dollar dominance and crypto innovation in the US. Win-Win or a New War?
This development shows that the biggest tension between crypto and traditional finance remains unresolved.
- Coinbase's stance: "Rewards that benefit the user must be protected; otherwise, regulation will be worse than the status quo."
- Bank's stance: "Stablecoins shouldn't erode our deposits."
- Other crypto players: "Let the law pass, then we'll fix it in court or through regulation."
Realistic view: Without bipartisan support, the filibuster obstacle cannot be overcome. Coinbase's resistance could kill the law or soften it further. However, a complete "rewards ban" will not pass the Senate.
In conclusion, the CLARITY Act is still alive but its pulse is weak. Coinbase's objection is putting negotiations back on the table. Senators, the Tillis-Alsobrooks team, and the crypto lobby will engage in intense discussions in the coming days. The April markup will either be cancelled or saved by a new compromise.
The US's dream of becoming the "digital asset capital of the world" is being tested once again in this stablecoin yield war. Coinbase's statement that "we can't support it yet" isn't just the voice of one company; it's a critical warning that will shape the future of the sector. We'll be watching – because 2030 is truly a long way off.
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