CLARITY Act stablecoin fight shifts from yield to who captures digital-dollar economics

CLARITY Act stablecoin fight shifts from yield to who captures digital-dollar economics


Washington is turning stablecoins into regulated payment instruments while trying to keep issuer-paid yield away from holders. That combination changesthe economics of digital dollars and puts the value of user balances up for grabs across the intermediary stack.

The GENIUS Act bars permitted payment stablecoin issuers and foreign payment stablecoin issuers from paying holders any form of interest or yield solely for holding, using, or retaining a payment stablecoin.

The FDIC’s April 7 proposal would turn parts of that law into operating standards for FDIC-supervised issuers, including reserves, redemption, capital, risk management, custody, pass-through insurance, and tokenized-deposit treatment.

That leaves a practical question for a market that reached roughly $320 billion in stablecoin supply in mid-April. If holders cannot receive direct issuer-paid yield, the value created by tokenized dollars still has to land somewhere.

The redistribution runs through the operating stack. The fight shifts to issuers, exchanges, wallets, custodians, banks, asset managers, card networks, and tokenized-deposit providers. They are the parties positioned to collect reserve income, distribution payments, custody fees, payment fees, settlement benefits, loyalty economics, or deposit economics.

Infographic mapping five stablecoin intermediaries that can capture digital dollar economics after a direct issuer-paid yield ban.Infographic mapping five stablecoin intermediaries that can capture digital dollar economics after a direct issuer-paid yield ban.

The rulebook pushes yield into the plumbing

The stablecoin framework begins with reserves. GENIUS requires permitted issuers to maintain identifiable reserves backing outstanding payment stablecoins at least 1:1, with reserve categories that include cash, bank deposits, short-term Treasuries, certain repo arrangements, government money market funds, and limited tokenized reserve forms.

It also requires reserve disclosures and redemption policies, restricts reserve reuse, and calls for capital, liquidity, risk management, AML, and sanctions controls.

That makes compliant payment stablecoins look more like regulated cash-management products than free-form crypto instruments. Issuers can hold large pools of income-producing assets. At the same time, the statute blocks those issuers from paying stablecoin holders direct interest or yield merely for holding or using the token.

The economic trade-off looked uneven in the White House’s April 8 yield-prohibition note, which estimated a baseline $2.1 billion increase in bank lending from eliminating stablecoin yield, equal to a 0.02% lending effect, alongside an $800 million net welfare cost.

The same note said affiliate or third-party arrangements could remain unless CLARITY variants close that channel.

White House exposes stablecoin yield ban wouldn't help banks, raising the stakes for CLARITY in the SenateWhite House exposes stablecoin yield ban wouldn't help banks, raising the stakes for CLARITY in the Senate
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White House exposes stablecoin yield ban wouldn’t help banks, raising the stakes for CLARITY in the Senate

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That caveat is where the post-CLARITY money map starts. A direct issuer-yield ban controls the issuer-holder relationship. It leaves open the harder economic question of how platforms, partners, payment apps, and bank structures treat the same value once it moves through distribution or product design.

CryptoSlate has already explored how the CLARITY fight is tied to stablecoin yield, regulatory control, market structure, and banking-sector pressure.

The commercial layer asks whether the law captures only the obvious form of yield, or also the ways a platform can turn stablecoin economics into something that feels like rewards, pricing power, or bundled financial service access.

The split runs through two layers. One side of the stack is statutory and prudential: reserve assets, redemption rights, capital standards, and supervision. The other side is commercial: distribution, wallet placement, exchange balances, merchant pricing, and settlement liquidity.

The policy debate becomes sharper when those layers are separated, because a ban at the issuer level can still leave value moving through the rest of the stack.

Issuers and exchanges already show the money trail

One clear example is USDC. Circle’s public filings describe a business built around reserve income, distribution costs, and partner economics. Its 2025 Form 10-K says Coinbase supports USDC usage across key products and that Circle makes payments to Coinbase tied principally to net reserve income from USDC.

The mechanics are more explicit in Circle’s S-1/A. The payment base is generated from reserves backing the stablecoin after management fees and other expenses.

Circle keeps an issuer portion, Circle and Coinbase receive allocations tied to stablecoins held in their own custodial products or managed wallets, and Coinbase receives 50% of the remaining payment base after approved participant payments.

That structure is the money map in miniature. A holder may see a stable dollar token. In the reserve and distribution structure, the reserve yield can move through issuer retention, platform-balance economics, ecosystem incentives, distribution agreements, and payments to approved participants.

Coinbase’s own filing shows why that channel is economically meaningful. Its 2025 Form 10-K reported stablecoin revenue as a business line and said a hypothetical 150 basis-point move in average rates applied to daily USDC reserve balances held by Circle would have affected stablecoin revenue by $540 million for 2025.

The point is specific: a large platform with distribution, balances, liquidity, and a deep issuer relationship can capture economics that the statute keeps away from holders in direct form.

Asset managers and custodial infrastructure sit on the same map. BlackRock’s Circle Reserve Fund showed a 3.60% seven-day SEC yield as of April 27, while Circle’s filing describes BlackRock as a preferred reserve-management partner and discusses the reserve-management relationship.

Stablecoin economics can accrue to the reserve stack, the manager, the custodian, the issuer, and the distributor before a user ever sees a token in a wallet.

Intermediary Economic lane User-facing form Policy constraint
Issuer Reserve income and issuance scale Stable dollar token and redemption promise Issuer-paid holder yield is barred under GENIUS
Exchange or wallet Distribution payments, platform balances, loyalty incentives Rewards, fee offsets, product access, liquidity Third-party reward treatment remains the live CLARITY fork
Custodian or asset manager Reserve management, custody, safekeeping Operational trust and reserve transparency FDIC and issuer rules shape permitted reserve and custody practices
Payment network or app Merchant fees, settlement speed, treasury operations Cheaper payments, faster settlement, rewards programs Payment integration raises intermediation and resiliency questions
Bank or tokenized-deposit provider Deposit economics and insured-bank balance-sheet activity Deposit-like digital dollars with bank treatment FDIC says qualifying tokenized deposits would be treated as deposits

Wallets and payment rails turn yield into product economics

The Fed’s April 8 FEDS Note gives the policy version of that table. It identifies complex intermediation chains, vertical integration, and accelerating retail adoption through wallet partnerships as structural stablecoin vulnerabilities.

It also points to integration with payment networks, banks, retail applications, broker-dealer funding, and card networks.

The Fed is studying a market where the issuer is only one node. Wallet providers, infrastructure firms, payment processors, brokers, banks, and card networks can all sit between the reserve asset and the user experience.

PayPal’s July 2025 Pay with Crypto announcement shows how that looks commercially.

The company described instant crypto-to-stablecoin or fiat conversion, a 0.99% merchant transaction rate through July 31, 2026, support for more than 100 cryptocurrencies and wallets, and PYUSD rewards for funds held on PayPal at the time of the announcement.

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