The White House Council of Economic Advisers (CEA) has pushed back against one of the biggest claims made by traditional banks—stating that stablecoin yield products do not pose a meaningful threat to small or community banks.
Stablecoin Yield Impact Found to Be “Minimal”
According to the report, banning yield on stablecoins would increase bank lending by just 0.02%, or roughly $2.1 billion—a negligible impact on the overall financial system.
This directly challenges arguments from banking groups that stablecoin rewards could drain trillions of dollars from deposits and disrupt lending markets.
The CEA concluded that the effect of stablecoin yield on bank lending is “quantitatively small”, suggesting fears from the banking sector may be overstated.
Why Banks’ Concerns May Be Overblown
One key reason: money doesn’t actually leave the financial system when users move funds into stablecoins.
When users convert dollars into stablecoins:
- Funds are typically reinvested into U.S. Treasuries
- Those funds are then redeposited back into the banking system
This means overall liquidity remains largely intact, even if the structure of deposits changes.
A Blow to the Case for Yield Bans
The findings come at a critical time, as lawmakers debate whether to restrict or ban yield-bearing stablecoins under legislation like the GENIUS Act and CLARITY Act.
The report suggests that banning yield:
- Would provide minimal benefit to banks
- Could reduce consumer benefits, including earning returns on digital dollars
In fact, economists estimate consumers could lose hundreds of millions in value if yield opportunities are removed.
What This Means for Crypto Regulation
This report weakens one of the strongest arguments used by traditional finance to push for stricter stablecoin rules.
If stablecoin yield doesn’t significantly harm banks, regulators may face increased pressure to:
- Allow innovation in yield-bearing products
- Focus on compliance rather than restriction
- Support competition between banks and crypto platforms
Why This Matters
This is a major moment in the stablecoin debate.
The bigger takeaway:
The battle over stablecoin yield isn’t just about risk—it’s about competition. And with the White House signaling that the threat to banks is minimal, the narrative is shifting toward allowing crypto to compete directly with traditional finance rather than protecting it.
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