In a significant escalation of the debate over digital asset regulation, representatives of the American banking sector have formally voiced their opposition to a recent White House report concerning stablecoin yields.
The report, issued by the Council of Economic Advisers (CEA) on 8 April 2026, suggested that interest-bearing stablecoins pose a negligible threat to traditional banking deposits. This conclusion is labelled by the banking lobby as fundamentally flawed.
The Independent Community Bankers of America (ICBA) and the American Community Bankers Association (ACBA) are leading the pushback. These organisations argue that the White House analysis severely underestimates the risk of ‘deposit flight’.
They maintain that if crypto platforms are permitted to offer high-yield rewards on stablecoins, trillions of rupees could be drained from local community banks, thereby crippling their ability to provide essential loans to small businesses and farmers.
The ‘Banking Member’ leading this opposition has criticised the CEA’s findings for focusing on a narrow, short-term data set while ignoring the potential for rapid, systemic shifts in consumer behaviour.
While the White House maintains that a ban on yields would lead to a ₹6,700 crore annual loss in consumer welfare, the banking lobby insists that protecting the stability of the traditional financial ‘family’ is a higher priority.
This friction comes at a delicate time for the CLARITY Act, which is currently undergoing a critical Senate markup. With the banking sector and the White House now at a data-driven deadlock, the final language of the bill remains a subject of intense negotiation.

Source: X.com
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