The White House’s self-imposed deadline for banks and crypto to resolve their stablecoin standoff has come and gone.
With no deal in sight, trillions in institutional capital now hang in the balance.
Why it matters:
- Stablecoin legislation is widely seen as the gateway to mainstream crypto adoption in the US.
- Without it, regulatory uncertainty persists, enforcement risk rises, and innovation continues migrating to friendlier jurisdictions in Europe and Asia.
The details:
- The March 1 deadline set by White House Crypto Council Executive Director Patrick Witt has passed without a compromise on stablecoin yield.
- Crypto firms are pushing for the legal right to offer regulated rewards on stablecoins like USDC.
- Meanwhile, banks, fearing deposit flight if users chase 4–5% stablecoin returns over 0.01% savings rates, are lobbying for strict limits or an outright ban.
- A banking source told Crypto In America that while there’s broad agreement stablecoin balances shouldn’t earn direct interest, crypto firms are still attempting to engineer yield through “membership programs, rewards, and staking” — a workaround banks say is holding up the deal.
- The OCC may have bolstered the banks’ position, signaling in its latest GENIUS Act rulemaking that stablecoin rewards could face tighter limits than the crypto industry anticipated.
The big picture:
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