TLDR
- Banking groups criticize the White House for posing the “wrong question” in its analysis of stablecoin interest payments
- Federal economists determined that prohibiting stablecoin yields would boost bank lending by merely $2.1 billion, representing 0.02% growth
- The ABA cautions that interest-bearing stablecoins threaten smaller financial institutions rather than the entire banking ecosystem
- Earlier Treasury analysis projected stablecoin growth could trigger $6.6 trillion in deposit withdrawals
- The controversy centers on the GENIUS Act’s prohibition against payment stablecoin providers distributing yields to users
On April 8, the White House published a comprehensive 21-page analysis concluding that prohibiting yields on stablecoins would minimally impact banking sector lending. According to the Council of Economic Advisers, such a prohibition would expand bank lending by approximately $2.1 billion—a mere 0.02% increase against a $12 trillion lending portfolio.
New analysis from the ABA econ team – the CEA studied the wrong question on stablecoin ‘yield’ and community banks. The real question is whether allowing yield would encourage deposit flight and harm economic growth.
Read it here: https://t.co/z7IShwNaHH pic.twitter.com/OIjQvjtGij
— American Bankers Association (@ABABankers) April 13, 2026
The analysis further calculated that consumers would forfeit approximately $800 million in potential earnings should yield restrictions take effect. Federal economists determined that stablecoin interest payments, given present market dynamics, pose minimal threat of substantial deposit migration.
The American Bankers Association swiftly countered, asserting the analysis examined the incorrect premise. According to the ABA, policymakers should investigate the consequences of permitting yield-generating stablecoins to expand, rather than examining prohibition scenarios.
ABA chief economist Sayee Srinivasan and banking research VP Yikai Wang warned that interest-bearing stablecoins represent direct competitive pressure on traditional bank deposits. They identified a prospective market ranging from $1 trillion to $2 trillion in payment stablecoins supported by Treasury securities and comparable safe-haven instruments.
The Community Bank Problem
The ABA’s primary apprehension focuses on regional and community banking institutions rather than systemwide stability concerns.
While aggregate deposits throughout the banking sector might remain unchanged, funds could redistribute from smaller institutions toward larger competitors. Such redistribution would compel community banks to secure more expensive borrowing arrangements or elevate their deposit interest rates.
Increased funding expenses at regional banks could restrict credit availability for local residents, small enterprises, and agricultural operations. These borrower segments depend significantly on relationship-oriented lenders instead of major national banking institutions.
The White House analysis maintained that when individuals transfer funds into stablecoins, issuing companies invest those reserves in Treasury securities and money market instruments. This mechanism returns most capital to the banking ecosystem, maintaining aggregate deposit stability.
The ABA contends this perspective overlooks institution-specific consequences. Individual community banks still suffer from deposit losses regardless of systemwide equilibrium.
The GENIUS Act Connection
Enacted in 2025, the GENIUS Act established initial federal regulatory framework for payment stablecoins and instituted restrictions preventing issuers from directly distributing yields to token holders. Nevertheless, these restrictions do not apply to third-party service providers.
Coinbase presently provides USDC incentive programs to customers through arrangements that distribute reserve earnings, functioning similarly to premium savings accounts. Certain iterations of the proposed CLARITY Act would eliminate this avenue by preventing intermediaries from transmitting yield distributions.
The ABA maintains that legislators should preserve the yield prohibition as a protective measure ensuring stablecoins remain payment instruments rather than evolving into alternatives for federally insured deposits. The ABA represents leading financial institutions including JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, and Citigroup.
Currently, over 80% of stablecoin transactions occur in offshore markets, with certain stablecoin issuers controlling Treasury holdings exceeding those of some sovereign nations.
