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Banks' Stance on Stablecoins Challenges White House CLARITY Agenda
The Trump administration faces a major dilemma: implement its strategy to integrate stablecoins into the U.S. financial system or yield to pressure from traditional banks, which see this technology as a direct threat to their business model. The banks’ stance has hardened this week, creating a significant obstacle to passing the CLARITY bill, the key piece of legislation in this transformation.
Why Stablecoins Pose an Existential Threat to Banks
The core of the conflict is based on a simple economic reality: stablecoins offer yields exceeding 5%, attracting large amounts of capital that would normally flow through the traditional banking system. Financial institutions fear that this unrestricted access to digital alternatives could lead to a massive migration of deposits to decentralized protocols.
Christopher Williston, president of the Independent Bankers Association of Texas, expressed this concern, stating that any compromise on CLARITY would be equivalent to “jeopardizing local lending and economic output.” For banks, this uncompromising stance is not a negotiating tactic but a line in the sand: either stablecoins remain confined to speculative niches, or regional financing collapses entirely.
The U.S. Treasury’s Strategic Position on Federal Bonds
Contrary to banks’ fears, the White House sees stablecoins as more than just a technological innovation. Recent research shows that stablecoins have gradually become a significant player in the bond markets: they purchased $153 billion in U.S. Treasury bonds in December 2025, making them the third-largest buyer. These acquisitions even reduced T-bill yields by more than 3.5 basis points.
For the Trump administration, this mechanism offers a rare strategic opportunity: to finance federal debt at lower costs while developing a tech sector aligned with its vision of digital supremacy. Limiting stablecoin rewards could slow this beneficial dynamic for public finances.
The Political Deadlock Between Firm Stance and Necessary Compromise
Patrick Witt, Trump’s crypto advisor, countered the banks’ arguments by emphasizing that their rigid position would cost them more in the long run. He warned that “no compromise on CLARITY would mean no restrictions on intermediaries offering stablecoin rewards.” His implicit message: banks would benefit from accepting regulated oversight rather than facing unchecked stablecoin adoption.
It’s important to note that the GENUIS law, passed last year, already authorizes stablecoin issuers to pay rewards through exchanges and DeFi protocols. This means that even if banks block CLARITY, the high-yield stablecoin market will continue to thrive outside the banking regulatory framework.
Outlook and Challenges for the Sector
Despite the escalation of the conflict this week, the market still anticipates a 71% probability that the cryptocurrency legislation will be passed this year. This expectation reflects a belief that compromise will ultimately prevail over confrontation, especially since the U.S. tax stakes outweigh the interests of traditional banks.
The question is no longer whether stablecoins will be integrated into the U.S. financial system but under what conditions. The current stance of banks risks putting them on the wrong side of an accelerating transition, while the White House prepares to redefine the boundaries between traditional finance and digital finance.