Patrick Witt says stablecoin yields differ from bank deposits, citing the GENIUS Act ban on lending reserves.
The debate over stablecoin regulation in the United States has intensified following Jamie Dimon’s recent remarks. His comments about interest-bearing stablecoins have drawn criticism from digital assets adviser Patrick Witt. The digital assets adviser said the argument misstates how fiat-pegged tokens operate.
In an interview with CNBC, JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said banks want stablecoin issuers that pay interest on customer balances to face the same rules as traditional lenders. He addressed reported tensions with Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong, who pulled support for the proposed CLARITY Act.
Dimon argued that there needs to be a line between rewards paid on transactions and interest paid on stored balances. According to the CEO, paying interest on stored balances makes a company operate like a bank, so it should be subject to bank-level regulation.
Platforms that resemble deposit-taking institutions should follow bank rules, he argued. Those standards include capital requirements, liquidity controls, anti-money laundering policies, and federal deposit insurance oversight.
Digital assets adviser Witt disputed Dimon’s interpretation in a post on X, saying the argument misrepresents how stablecoin yield works.
“The deceit here is that it is not the paying of yield on a balance per se that necessitates bank-like regulations, rather the lending out or rehypothecation of the dollars that make up the underlying balance.”
Patrick Witt wrote.
Witt pointed to the GENIUS Act, passed in July 2025. Under the legislation, stablecoin issuers cannot lend or reuse reserves backing fiat-pegged tokens. Restrictions aim to prevent practices common in banking or traditional lending systems.
He further argued that stablecoin balances therefore differ from bank deposits. Deposits in banks often support lending activity. Stablecoin reserves must remain fully backed and segregated.
Disagreement over stablecoin rewards delayed legislation on the broader crypto market structure. Negotiations around the CLARITY Act stalled as banks and crypto companies debated rules governing stablecoin yields.
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