Eric Trump posted on X accusing major banks including JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, and Wells Fargo of lobbying to block stablecoin yield programs in order to protect a deposit spread that generates record profits while paying customers almost nothing.
The math Eric Trump laid out is straightforward. Major banks pay depositors between 0.01% and 0.05% annually on standard savings accounts. The Federal Reserve pays those same banks 4% or more on their reserves. The gap between what banks earn from the Fed and what they pay customers is the spread, and it is enormous.
A bank holding $1 billion in customer deposits earns roughly $40 million annually from the Fed on those reserves while paying customers approximately $100,000 to $500,000 in interest.
That difference goes to the bank. It funds the record profits that major financial institutions have reported across multiple consecutive years. It funds, as Eric Trump pointedly noted, new headquarters buildings in Midtown Manhattan.
Stablecoin platforms are now proposing to offer customers 4% to 5% yields or rewards on dollar-pegged digital assets. That is the same rate the Fed pays banks, passed through to the end user instead of captured as margin. If customers can earn 4% holding a stablecoin versus 0.01% in a savings account, the rational move is to move deposits. That is deposit flight, and it threatens the spread directly.
Eric Trump argued that banking industry groups including the American Bankers Association are framing their opposition to stablecoin yields around words like fairness and stability, while the actual motivation is protecting the deposit monopoly. That framing critique is pointed and not without basis.
The banking lobby’s stated concerns about stablecoin yield programs center on systemic risk, the argument that unregulated yield-bearing stablecoins could destabilize the financial system if they scale. The counterargument, which Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong has made explicitly and which now has White House backing following Trump’s Truth Social post this week, is that the ban is not about stability. It is about competition.
Both arguments contain truth. Deposit flight at scale would create genuine liquidity pressure on banks. And banks lobbying against a competitor product that would compress their margins is also straightforwardly self-interested behavior. These two motivations are not mutually exclusive, which is why the legislative fight has been difficult to resolve.
Eric Trump’s post lands in the middle of the most concentrated week of crypto regulatory activity in recent memory. President Trump attacked banks on Truth Social on March 4 using almost identical framing. The SEC submitted a crypto interpretive framework to the White House on March 3. The CLARITY Act negotiations are ongoing. Western Union launched a stablecoin on Solana. Morgan Stanley filed for a Bitcoin ETF.
The Trump family is publicly and explicitly aligned with the crypto industry’s position on stablecoin yields. That alignment is not subtle. The President posted about it on Truth Social. His son posted about it thirteen hours later with specific bank names and yield figures. The political pressure on the banking lobby is coming from the top of the executive branch and being amplified by the family around it.
Whether that pressure translates into legislation that allows stablecoin yield programs depends on whether banks have enough congressional allies to hold the line in the CLARITY Act negotiations. Eric Trump’s closing line, that banks are losing this fight as customers wake up to the games, reads more as advocacy than analysis. But the direction of the political momentum this week supports the assessment more than it contradicts it.
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