What's Hot

    Energy grid operators are ignoring Bitcoin’s stabilization benefits to chase a wealthier, less flexible buyer

    January 13, 2026

    Ukraine blocks Polymarket over unlicensed gambling

    January 13, 2026

    CHZ extends rally as bulls eye the $0.06 level

    January 13, 2026
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    • Business
    • Markets
    • Get In Touch
    • Our Authors
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    Crypto News: Latest Cryptocurrency News and Analysis
    • Home
    • Business

      Fidelity Buys 7.4% Of Bitcoin Mining Company Marathon Digital Holdings

      February 11, 2021

      Twitter Reacts as Auto Driver Begins Accepting Crypto as Payment

      February 11, 2021

      HSBC Becomes Latest Bank to Suspend Payments to Crypto

      February 4, 2021

      Bitcoin Holds Support; Approaching $50K Resistance

      February 4, 2021

      Cryptocurrency Prices Today: Bitcoin Up Over $47,000, Ether Rises 3%

      February 3, 2021
    • Technology
      1. Business
      2. Insights
      3. View All

      Fidelity Buys 7.4% Of Bitcoin Mining Company Marathon Digital Holdings

      February 11, 2021

      Twitter Reacts as Auto Driver Begins Accepting Crypto as Payment

      February 11, 2021

      HSBC Becomes Latest Bank to Suspend Payments to Crypto

      February 4, 2021

      Bitcoin Holds Support; Approaching $50K Resistance

      February 4, 2021

      Energy grid operators are ignoring Bitcoin’s stabilization benefits to chase a wealthier, less flexible buyer

      January 13, 2026

      Ukraine blocks Polymarket over unlicensed gambling

      January 13, 2026

      CHZ extends rally as bulls eye the $0.06 level

      January 13, 2026

      The US Senate could wipe out $6 billion in crypto rewards this week by closing one specific loophole

      January 13, 2026

      Bitcoin Climbs as Elon Musk Says Tesla ‘Likely’ to Accept it Again

      March 16, 2021

      Can Cryptocurrency Be Hacked, Stolen Or Scammed? How Can You Be Safe?

      February 11, 2021

      How Investors Can Get In On Crypto Without Actually Buying Any

      February 4, 2021

      Ethereum Just Underwent a Major Change – Hence, The 25% Jump in a Week!

      February 4, 2021
    • Insights
      1. Bitcoin
      2. Ethereum
      3. Eurozone
      4. Monero
      5. View All

      SEC Chair Says US Could Consider Venezuela Bitcoin Seizure If Opportunity Arises

      January 13, 2026

      Trump-Linked World Liberty Financial Enters Onchain Lending With New DeFi Platform

      January 13, 2026

      Hoskinson Doubts CLARITY Act Timeline, Urges Trump Crypto Adviser to Step Down

      January 13, 2026

      Standard Chartered Sees Ether Poised to Outperform Bitcoin, Targets US$40K by 2030

      January 13, 2026

      Energy grid operators are ignoring Bitcoin’s stabilization benefits to chase a wealthier, less flexible buyer

      January 13, 2026

      The US Senate could wipe out $6 billion in crypto rewards this week by closing one specific loophole

      January 13, 2026

      Bitcoin investors brace for triple-test within the next 72 hours

      January 13, 2026

      Can Bitcoin help amid internet blackouts after Iran’s currency collapsed 95% overnight?

      January 13, 2026

      Ukraine blocks Polymarket over unlicensed gambling

      January 13, 2026

      CHZ extends rally as bulls eye the $0.06 level

      January 13, 2026

      Railgun (RAIL) price jumps 45% above $3 as bulls eye new all-time high

      January 13, 2026

      XRP still trading below $2.1, eyes the $2.5 resistance: Check forecast

      January 13, 2026

      U.S. Mint Signals Pricing Review Amid Record Silver Prices

      January 13, 2026

      PNG Opens Nominations for 2026 Numismatic Awards

      January 13, 2026

      Paul Hollis Officially Becomes 41st U.S. Mint Director

      January 8, 2026

      Umayyad Gold Dinar, NGC-Certified, Heads CNG Jan. 14 Auction

      January 8, 2026

      Energy grid operators are ignoring Bitcoin’s stabilization benefits to chase a wealthier, less flexible buyer

      January 13, 2026

      Ukraine blocks Polymarket over unlicensed gambling

      January 13, 2026

      CHZ extends rally as bulls eye the $0.06 level

      January 13, 2026

      The US Senate could wipe out $6 billion in crypto rewards this week by closing one specific loophole

      January 13, 2026
    • Markets
    • Get In Touch
    Crypto News: Latest Cryptocurrency News and Analysis
    Home » The US Senate could wipe out $6 billion in crypto rewards this week by closing one specific loophole
    Ethereum

    The US Senate could wipe out $6 billion in crypto rewards this week by closing one specific loophole

    行政By 行政January 13, 2026No Comments9 Mins Read
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    The GENIUS Act banned issuer-paid yield, but the Senate markup fight is whether exchanges can keep routing rewards around that restriction, and the answer could decide who controls $6 billion in annual incentives.

    Senate Banking is scheduled to consider the CLARITY Act on Jan. 15, and the legislative fight has narrowed to a single question with billion-dollar consequences: what counts as a stablecoin “reward,” and who’s allowed to pay it?

    Bloomberg reported that Coinbase may reconsider its support for CLARITY if the bill’s language moves beyond disclosure requirements to outright restrict rewards, a signal that the industry’s pro-crypto coalition is testing its own limits as regulatory text gets more specific.

    The backdrop is straightforward. GENIUS, now Public Law 119-27, established a payment stablecoin framework and included an issuer-level prohibition: permitted stablecoin issuers cannot pay holders interest or yield solely for holding, using, or retaining the stablecoin.

    The logic was clear, as payment stablecoins should function as money, not deposit substitutes competing with regulated banks. But GENIUS left open the question of what happens when platforms, exchanges, or affiliates offer rewards funded from their own revenue or structured as loyalty incentives rather than direct yield pass-throughs.

    CLARITY is where that enforcement perimeter gets defined, and the markup will reveal whether Congress treats the issuer ban as a narrow firewall or the start of a broader prohibition that extends to any entity in the distribution chain.

    Definition fight that actually matters

    Three archetypes of stablecoin rewards exist in the market, and lawmakers are implicitly choosing which ones survive.

    1. The first is issuer-paid yield, where the stablecoin issuer shares reserve income directly with holders. GENIUS was designed to block this, and no one disputes that restriction.
    2. The second is platform-funded loyalty, where an exchange or wallet pays rewards from its own margin or marketing budget to drive adoption or retain balances.
    3. The third is pass-through T-bill economics, where product design effectively routes reserve yield to users through affiliate structures, partner arrangements, or carefully layered incentive programs that claim independence from the issuer.

    The legislative knife-edge is whether CLARITY treats rewards as a disclosure-only issue or imposes substantive restrictions.

    If the Senate text lands at disclosure-only, exchanges can plausibly keep rewards alive as consumer incentives, disclosed but unrestricted.

    If the language tightens into limits, caps, or conditions, then the economics of USDC distribution and on-platform stablecoin balances change entirely.

    That distinction is exactly why the markup matters beyond the usual legislative theater.

    Stablecoin scaling chart
    Stablecoin supply could grow from $309 billion currently to $420 billion by 2026 and $4 trillion by 2030 under bullish forecasts.

    Who’s lobbying for what

    Banks want the affiliate and partner loophole closed. The American Bankers Association and 52 state bankers’ associations explicitly urged Congress to clarify that the GENIUS prohibition should extend to partners and affiliates, warning of deposit disintermediation and yield-like incentives that bypass the issuer ban.

    Bank-aligned commenters responding to Treasury’s GENIUS implementation notice went further, arguing that benefits provided directly or indirectly should fall within the prohibition.

    Their concern is structural: if platforms can offer rewards that function economically like yield, the issuer ban becomes theater while the real competition for deposits happens one layer removed.

    The crypto industry argues that Congress deliberately distinguished between issuer-paid yield and platform rewards.

    The Blockchain Association-led coalition argues that the law bans issuer-paid yield while preserving the ability of platforms and third parties to offer lawful rewards and incentives.

    They warn that expanding the ban would reduce competition, inject uncertainty early in implementation, and penalize exchanges for using their own capital to drive adoption.

    Coinbase’s economic exposure makes this more than posturing. The company reported $355 million in stablecoin revenue in the third quarter of 2025 and described rewards as a driver of USDC growth, with average USDC balances in Coinbase products around $15 billion during that quarter.

    Rewards language hits a material revenue line.

    Why therminology mattersWhy therminology matters
    Coinbase reported $355 million in stablecoin revenue during Q3 2025, supported by average USDC balances of approximately $15 billion on its platform.

    Why does this fight get harder in 2026

    Stablecoins are scaling fast enough that rewards become system-relevant rather than a niche product feature.

    Stablecoins registered $33 trillion in transaction volume in 2025, up 72% year-over-year, with USDC and Tether accounting for the majority of flows.

    Stablecoins just eclipsed Bitcoin in the one metric that matters, exposing a $23 trillion global fault lineStablecoins just eclipsed Bitcoin in the one metric that matters, exposing a $23 trillion global fault line
    Related Reading

    Stablecoins just eclipsed Bitcoin in the one metric that matters, exposing a $23 trillion global fault line

    Cross-border flows have finally overtaken Ethereum, proving these tokens are no longer just for crypto gambling.

    Dec 8, 2025 · Oluwapelumi Adejumo

    Bernstein projects that the total stablecoin supply will reach approximately $420 billion by the end of 2026, representing roughly 56% growth from current levels. Citi’s longer-run forecast puts stablecoin issuance at $1.9 trillion in a base case and $4 trillion in a bull case by 2030.

    BC GameBC Game

    Those numbers matter because they translate directly into the size of the rewards pool at stake.

    A simple calculation shows the magnitude. At the current supply of nearly $309 billion, a 1.5% to 2.5% annual rewards rate implies annual incentives of $4.6 billion to $7.7 billion.

    If supply reaches Bernstein’s 2026 forecast of $420 billion, that pool grows to $6.3 billion to $10.5 billion. By 2030, under Citi’s base case, it could reach $28.5 billion to $47.5 billion annually.

    Those figures assume a moderate reward rate, well below what some platforms currently offer, and reflect the economic battlefield where banks, exchanges, and issuers compete for customer balances and payment flows.

    Banks are treating this as a deposit war because the numbers justify that framing.

    Standard Chartered estimated stablecoin adoption could pull $1 trillion from emerging-market bank deposits over roughly three years, with savings usage rising materially by 2028.

    That projection assumes stablecoins continue to function as quasi-savings vehicles rather than pure transactional instruments, which is exactly what happens when platforms offer rewards that make holding balances attractive.

    The macro backdrop explains why banks pushed for the affiliate and partner perimeter in their congressional comments, they see rewards as the mechanism that turns payment stablecoins into deposit substitutes regardless of what the issuer does.

    What to watch at markup

    Four questions will determine whether the coalition holds or fractures.

    1. Does CLARITY treat rewards as disclosure-only or impose substantive restrictions? Disclosure requirements leave room for platforms to continue rewards programs with transparency. Substantive restrictions would cap, condition, or outright prohibit those programs.
    2. Does the language apply only to issuers or extend to affiliated platforms, partners, and intermediaries? That’s the explicit ask from banks and the explicit objection from exchanges.
    3. Does the definition of “reward” capture pass-through reserve yield economics, or is it narrow enough that exchanges can route around it through loyalty programs and marketing spend? The Treasury notice comment letters make this the real definitional battleground: whether “solely” becomes a loophole or a clear line.
    4. What does enforcement look like in practice? Even if markup advances CLARITY, implementation requires rulemakings, agency resourcing, and coordination between Treasury, the Federal Reserve, and prudential regulators.

    The January markup is an opening move, not a finish line, and the regulatory perimeter could shift as agencies interpret the statute and respond to industry structuring.

    The Bank for International Settlements has already catalogued how regulators globally approach stablecoin yields and rewards, including prohibitions on no-interest or yield arrangements and the policy logic that distinguishes payment instruments from investment products.

    The European Union and the United Kingdom are moving toward tighter perimeter controls, with financial stability framing, treating stablecoin regulation as systemic rather than experimental.

    That international context matters because it sets the baseline for what counts as a credible payment stablecoin framework, and whether the US law creates arbitrage opportunities or aligns with global standards.

    Issue Disclosure-only? Substantive restriction? Applies to affiliates/partners? Routes-around possible?
    1) Disclosure vs restriction Requires clear consumer disclosures for rewards (rate, source of funds, conditions, revocability) but does not limit offering rewards Caps/conditions/prohibits rewards (or creates “de facto ban” via eligibility, funding, or product-structure limits) If yes, it can become a backdoor restriction even if framed as disclosure High under disclosure-only (exchanges can rebrand as loyalty/marketing); low–medium if restrictions define rewards broadly
    2) Issuer-only vs affiliates/partners Keeps GENIUS’ issuer-level “no yield” as the main line; platform rewards remain allowed Extends restrictions to platforms, intermediaries, affiliates, partners (banks’ preferred perimeter) This is the core switch: explicit extension = broad perimeter High if issuer-only (platform-funded rewards continue); low if affiliates/partners included (routing collapses into compliance risk)
    3) Broad vs narrow “reward” definition (captures pass-through yield?) Narrow definition (e.g., “interest paid by issuer”) + disclosures → likely leaves room for “loyalty” framing Broad definition that captures direct or indirect economic benefits tied to holding/using/retaining stablecoins (including coordinated funding / pass-through economics) If affiliates/partners are included, a broad definition is what prevents “one-layer-removed” incentives High if narrow (loyalty, rebates, points, fee credits); medium if broad but enforcement light; low if broad + clear anti-evasion language
    4) Enforcement path (rulemaking / agencies) Heavy reliance on agency rules/guidance to specify disclosures, scope, and anti-evasion Statute hard-codes prohibitions/conditions; agencies mainly implement If enforcement delegates to agencies, partners/affiliates scope may expand via interpretation even if statute is ambiguous Higher when rules lag or definitions are vague; lower when statute defines “reward” + anti-evasion clearly and agencies coordinate

    Real stakes

    GENIUS established the principle that payment stablecoins shouldn’t pay yield at the issuer level. CLARITY decides whether that principle extends to the entire distribution chain or is limited to the entities holding reserves.

    If the Senate text restricts platform rewards substantively or expands the prohibition to affiliates, exchanges lose a primary tool for driving adoption and retaining balances. If the text stops at disclosure, the issuer ban becomes a compliance checkpoint while the real economic competition continues at the platform layer.

    Coinbase’s reported willingness to reconsider support signals that the industry sees this as a line worth defending, not just a negotiating position. The company’s $355 million quarterly stablecoin revenue and emphasis on rewards as a growth driver make clear that restricting platform incentives changes the business model, not just the disclosure burden.

    Banks’ equally firm push to close the affiliate loophole shows they view platform rewards as the mechanism that turns GENIUS’ issuer ban into a workaround rather than a solution.

    The markup will reveal which theory of stablecoin regulation prevails: narrow issuer restrictions that preserve platform competition, or broad prohibitions that treat any yield-adjacent incentive as a threat to deposit stability.

    That choice determines who controls the $6 billion to $10 billion in annual rewards projected for 2026, and whether GENIUS’ “payment stablecoin” framing holds in practice or becomes a label that obscures economic reality.

    Banks are lobbying to kill crypto rewards to protect a hidden $1,400 “tax” on every householdBanks are lobbying to kill crypto rewards to protect a hidden $1,400 “tax” on every household
    Related Reading

    Banks are lobbying to kill crypto rewards to protect a hidden $1,400 “tax” on every household

    They earn $176B on Fed reserves and $187B in swipe fees, and now they’re lobbying to shut the rewards door.

    Jan 10, 2026 · Gino Matos

    The coalition supporting crypto regulation was built on the premise that clear rules enable innovation. CLARITY’s rewards language will test whether that coalition can survive the specifics of what those rules actually say.

    Mentioned in this article

    Featured,Regulation,Stablecoins#Senate #wipe #billion #crypto #rewards #week #closing #specific #loophole1768316793

    billion closing Crypto loophole Rewards Senate specific week wipe
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    行政
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Energy grid operators are ignoring Bitcoin’s stabilization benefits to chase a wealthier, less flexible buyer

    January 13, 2026

    Bitcoin investors brace for triple-test within the next 72 hours

    January 13, 2026

    Can Bitcoin help amid internet blackouts after Iran’s currency collapsed 95% overnight?

    January 13, 2026

    Hoskinson Doubts CLARITY Act Timeline, Urges Trump Crypto Adviser to Step Down

    January 13, 2026
    Add A Comment

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Millennials Are Quitting Job to Become Day Traders

    January 20, 2021

    Jack Dorsey Says Bitcoin Will Unite The World

    January 15, 2021

    Hong Kong Customs Arrest Four in Crypto Laundering Bust

    January 15, 2021

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest sports news from SportsSite about soccer, football and tennis.

    Advertisement
    Demo

    Your source for the serious news. This demo is crafted specifically to exhibit the use of the theme as a news site. Visit our main page for more demos.

    We're social. Connect with us:

    Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest YouTube
    Top Insights

    Energy grid operators are ignoring Bitcoin’s stabilization benefits to chase a wealthier, less flexible buyer

    January 13, 2026

    Ukraine blocks Polymarket over unlicensed gambling

    January 13, 2026

    CHZ extends rally as bulls eye the $0.06 level

    January 13, 2026
    Get Informed

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest
    • Home
    • Business
    • Markets
    • Technology
    • Contact us
    © 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by WPfastworld.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.