JPMorgan Chase raised concerns about yield-bearing stablecoins during its fourth-quarter earnings call this week. Chief Financial Officer Jeremy Barnum warned that these products could create an unregulated alternative to traditional banking.
The comments came after Evercore analyst Glenn Schorr asked about stablecoins and recent lobbying efforts. The American Bankers Association has pushed for restrictions on crypto products that compete with bank deposits.
Barnum said JPMorgan supports the GENIUS Act approach to stablecoin regulation. The CFO focused his criticism on interest-bearing stablecoins that mirror traditional banking products without equivalent oversight.
He described the potential outcome as a parallel banking system. Such a system would include deposit-like products that pay interest but lack regulatory safeguards built over centuries.
The bank supports competition and technological innovation. However, JPMorgan opposes financial systems operating outside established regulatory frameworks.
The US Senate Banking Committee released an updated Digital Asset Market Clarity Act draft on Monday. The legislation includes new restrictions on how crypto companies can offer stablecoin rewards.
The bill prohibits digital asset service providers from paying interest solely for holding stablecoins. This provision aims to prevent stablecoins from functioning as unregulated deposit accounts.
The legislation does allow certain types of rewards. Companies can offer incentives tied to liquidity provision, governance participation, staking and other network activities.
Lawmakers want to draw a clear line between passive yield and active participation rewards. The distinction matters for how regulators will treat different crypto products.
US banks view yield-bearing stablecoins as a major competitive threat. Industry sources described the banking sector’s response as panic when these products gained traction in 2024.
Stablecoins have grown rapidly for payments and settlements. They provide faster transaction speeds and lower costs than traditional banking rails.
Adding yield to stablecoins makes them more attractive to consumers. Banks offer relatively low interest rates on checking and savings accounts.
JPMorgan Chase & Co., JPM
Barnum acknowledged JPMorgan already provides some crypto services. He said the bank would need to either match crypto offerings or improve its own products where technology provides better customer experiences.
The CFO questioned whether stablecoin yield truly benefits consumers. He emphasized that any parallel financial system must include appropriate regulation to protect users.
The Senate bill addresses broader regulatory questions beyond stablecoin yield. It clarifies jurisdiction between the Securities and Exchange Commission and Commodity Futures Trading Commission over digital assets.
Barnum raised questions about system-wide deposit effects and fund flows between consumers and providers. He did not elaborate on specific risk factors these issues might create.
The bank’s position reflects broader Wall Street concerns about crypto competition. Traditional financial institutions are balancing innovation support with calls for regulatory parity.
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