US bank groups ask to close GENIUS Act’s stablecoin yield ‘loophole’
2025-08-13 17:13:10 Primitive Reading

 

Several US banking groups led by the Bank Policy Institute (BPI) urged regulators to close what they say is a loophole that may indirectly allow stablecoin issuers and their affiliates to pay interest or yields on stablecoins.

In a Tuesday letter to Congress, BPI warned that a failure to close the so-called loophole in the new stablecoin laws under the GENIUS Act may disrupt the flow of credit to American businesses and families, potentially triggering $6.6 trillion in deposit outflows from the traditional banking system.

The GENIUS Act prohibits stablecoin issuers from offering interest or yield to holders of the token; however, it does not explicitly extend the ban to crypto exchanges or affiliated businesses, potentially enabling issuers to sidestep the law by offering yields through those partners, the groups said.

  Source: Bank Policy Institute


Offering yield is one of the biggest marketing appeals that stablecoin issuers have to attract users. Some offer yield natively for holders while others, such as users of Circle’s USDC 

USDC$0.9998, are rewarded for holding the stablecoin on exchanges such as Coinbase and Kraken.

The banking groups are seemingly concerned that the wide adoption of yield-bearing stablecoins could undermine the banking system, which relies on banks attracting deposits with high-interest savings products in order to back the loans they make.

Stablecoins could undermine credit system, bankers say

In the letter, also signed by the American Bankers Association, Consumer Bankers Association, Independent Community Bankers of America and the Financial Services Forum, BPI noted stablecoins are fundamentally different from bank deposits and money market funds because they don’t fund loans or invest in securities to offer yield.

“These distinctions are why payment stablecoins should not pay interest the way highly regulated and supervised banks do on deposits or offer yield as money market funds do.”

Allowing payments of interest or yield on stablecoins could lead to $6.6 trillion in deposit outflows, BPI noted, citing a US Treasury report from April. 

Disclaimer: This specification is preliminary and is subject to change at any time without notice. Amazon Finance assumes no responsibility for any errors contained herein.

Recommended reading
USDC issuer Circle to launch new layer-1 Arc blockchain this year

10-22     admin     18008 Reading

How plushies saved Pudgy Penguins from bankruptcy

10-22     admin     17574 Reading

Ethereum whales scoop sales by traders in ‘disbelief’ of rally: Santiment

10-22     admin     19556 Reading

World Liberty Financial weighs $1.5B public company to hold WLFI tokens

10-22     admin     10556 Reading

Ethereum transaction volumes see year-high amid SEC staking drama

10-22     admin     15184 Reading

‘Time is now’ for US to lead global crypto race, says CCI chief

10-22     admin     13545 Reading

The future belongs to those who own their AI

10-22     admin     13035 Reading

Vitalik backs Ethereum treasury firms, but warns of overleverage

10-22     admin     11807 Reading

Animoca and Standard Chartered form stablecoin venture in Hong Kong

10-22     admin     13389 Reading

Ethereum Treasury Companies Are a Better Buy Than US Spot Ether ETFs, Standard Chartered Says

10-22     admin     14641 Reading

Trump signs order broadening access for alternative assets in 401(k)s

10-22     admin     17625 Reading

UK u-turn on retail access to crypto ETNs signals push to become crypto hub

10-22     admin     8559 Reading

Eye-scanning crypto projects pose national security risks, China warns

10-22     admin     15692 Reading

Project Crypto: Three Investments Poised To Benefit From the SEC’s Shocking New Vision

10-22     admin     10041 Reading

SEC’s crypto pivot has ‘not been priced in,’ Bitwise exec says

10-22     admin     16810 Reading