US President Donald Trump listen to White House AI and Crypto Czar David Sacks speak during a the White House Crypto Summit in Washington, DC, March 7, 2025. (Photo by Jim WATSON / AFP) (Photo by JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images)
A key White House-hosted meeting aimed at breaking the legislative logjam over the U.S. crypto market structure billconcluded without a breakthrough, but officials say progress was made and both sides now face a late-February deadline to resolve a central sticking point.
The Feb. 2 gathering brought together cryptocy industry leaders — including executives from major firms like Coinbase, Circle and Ripple — with banking groups such as the American Bankers Association and other Wall Street trade associations. The event, organized by the White House Crypto Policy Council, was designed to tackle the key issue blocking movement: how stablecoin yield and rewards should be treated in federal law.
Senior White House officials described the discussions as “constructive and fact-based,” but confirmed that deep disagreements remain over stablecoin yield — particularly whether banks or crypto platforms should be allowed to offer interest or other rewards on U.S. dollar-pegged stablecoins. Banks argue that permitting yield-like incentives on stablecoins risks drawing deposits away from traditional lending institutions, potentially weakening community bank lending. Crypto firms counter that such rewards are essential for product competitiveness and innovation.
Representatives of the banking sector issued a joint statement after the meeting expressing appreciation for the White House’s leadership and reinforcing concerns over financial stability and deposit protection — while committing to continued engagement with lawmakers and regulators.
Although no legislative language was agreed upon during the session, the White House has set a target of late Februaryfor stakeholders to find common ground on stablecoin yield provisions if the broader CLARITY Act and related market structure legislation are to move forward in 2026. Admin officials and crypto advocates see this as a pivotal window for drafting workable compromise language.
Patrick Witt, the Executive Director of the White House Crypto Council, expressed optimism that stablecoin yield could eventually be resolved despite being one of the most intractable policy disputes. Meanwhile, industry groups such as the Blockchain Association called the meeting “an important step forward”, even as challenges remain.
The deadlock over stablecoin yield has already stalled the Senate Banking Committee’s scheduled markup of the crypto market structure bill, forcing its delay into late February or March. Until lawmakers can reconcile conflicting views — both among themselves and between traditional banks and crypto innovators — prospects for a comprehensive digital asset regulatory framework this year remain uncertain.
Observers say that if compromise isn’t reached by the end of February, digital asset legislation may shift toward piecemeal regulatory actions by federal agencies rather than a unified federal law — a scenario many in the crypto industry had hoped to avoid.
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