Jamie Dimon Warns Stablecoin Yield Fight Could Threaten US Financial System

USD pegged stablecoin and digital dollar. Cryptocurrency tokens on blockchain networks. Man paying with stablecoins using mobile crypto wallet on smartphone.
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  • A dispute over stablecoin rewards has delayed crypto legislation, with banks warning unequal rules could shift risk outside the regulated system.
  • Coinbase’s withdrawal from the CLARITY Act vote highlights tensions over whether stablecoin yield products resemble insured deposits.
  • Dimon says firms paying interest on token balances must meet bank-level capital, liquidity and compliance standards.


As US lawmakers struggle to advance a crypto market structure bill, JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon has issued a pointed warning over proposals that would allow crypto companies to pay yield on stablecoin holding. He argued that permitting such programmes without equivalent banking regulation could create systemic vulnerabilities.

The core dispute involves whether platforms like Coinbase can provide substantial rewards on dollar-pegged stablecoins, a move banks say would make traditional low-yield accounts less attractive. Dimon said that while banks could accept rewards linked to specific transactions, paying interest on customer balances amounts to deposit-taking and should be treated as such. “Rewards are the same as interest,” he said.

If you are going to be holding balances and paying interest, that’s the bank. You should be regulated by a bank.

Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan Chase, CEO

Related:Labour MP Urges UK to Ban Crypto Political Donations Over Foreign Interference Fears

The Compliance Divide

He emphasised that banks must meet stringent requirements, including deposit insurance participation, anti-money laundering compliance, capital and liquidity standards, reporting obligations and community investment rules. According to Dimon, applying lighter oversight to crypto firms offering similar services would be unfair and could erode confidence in the financial system.

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The legislative impasse deepened after Coinbase withdrew support for the CLARITY Act ahead of a Senate Banking Committee vote, citing anticipated amendments affecting stablecoin rewards. The vote was subsequently shelved.

Dimon added that JPMorgan backs competition and uses blockchain technology internally, but maintained that comparable financial products must operate under comparable regulatory standards.

Related: Next 150 Days Make-Or-Break For Crypto, Says Swyftx Analyst Hundal

Rachel Lourdesamy
Author

Rachel Lourdesamy

Rachel is a freelance writer based in Sydney with experience within financial services, marketing, and corporate communications in the APAC region. An avid reader and a graduate of the University of Sydney, she covers topics including business, finance and human interest.

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