
Proposed restrictions under the US CLARITY Act are raising concerns that capital could exit regulated markets in search of higher yield opportunities elsewhere.
Industry participants warn that banning yield on compliant stablecoins may undermine regulatory goals rather than strengthen financial stability.
The restrictions are seen as potentially accelerating the shift of investor funds into offshore and opaque financial structures.
Colin Butler, head of markets at Mega Matrix, said banning compliant stablecoins from offering yield would sideline regulated institutions rather than protect the system.
There’s always going to be demand for yield, and if compliant stablecoins can’t offer it, capital will move offshore or into synthetic structures outside the regulatory perimeter.
Colin Butler said.
The recently enacted GENIUS Act classifies payment stablecoins as digital cash and prohibits them from paying interest to holders.
Under this framework, stablecoins such as USDC must be fully backed by cash or short-term US Treasuries.