Stablecoin rules: Banks and crypto firms clash over interest deals
Washington, D.C., USAFri Apr 03 2026
This week, a quiet meeting between big banks and crypto companies could shape how Americans use digital money next year. A small team will review a new Senate proposal that tries to balance two very different worlds: traditional finance and the fast-moving crypto market. The debate isn’t about whether stablecoins—digital dollars tied to U. S. currency—should exist. It’s about whether companies can pay interest on them, like a savings account, but without the same rules.
Stablecoins act like cash in crypto trading, helping people move value quickly across borders. But when companies like Circle or Coinbase offer "yield" on these tokens, regulators get nervous. Banks say it looks like a sneaky way to take deposits without FDIC protection. Crypto firms argue that without incentives, people won’t use digital dollars as much. The current draft tries to split the difference: allow rewards for doing things like trading, but block simple interest payments. It’s a compromise born from months of closed-door talks where neither side got everything they wanted.
The bigger fight is about who controls the digital economy. The GENIUS Act of 2025 set basic rules for stablecoins, requiring reserves and transparency. Now Congress wants to go further with the CLARITY Act, covering everything from trading platforms to custody services. But progress is stuck because one question keeps tripping everyone up: should stablecoin holders earn anything extra? The answer could decide whether U. S. crypto stays fragmented or finds a stable path forward.
https://localnews.ai/article/stablecoin-rules-banks-and-crypto-firms-clash-over-interest-deals-e560bc1
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