Silicon Valley and Wall Street have long viewed the interest-bearing stablecoin as the “killer app” of digital finance. But a definitive line is being drawn in Washington. The latest version of the Crypto Clarity Act specifically bans stablecoin issuers from passing yields directly to holders on their account balances. It’s a move that effectively kills the dream of the high-yield crypto savings account as a regulated, mass-market product in the United States.
The restriction targets a fundamental tension in the industry. For years, companies have tried to market stablecoins as a superior alternative to traditional bank accounts by sharing the interest earned on the Treasury bills backing the tokens. Under the new legislative framework, those profits stay with the issuer, leaving users with a tool for payment and settlement, but nothing that resembles a passive income vehicle.
The Regulatory Firebreak Between Savings and Payments
Lawmakers behind the act argue that the ban is necessary to prevent stablecoins from being classified as unregistered securities. If a token offers a return on investment based on the efforts of the issuer, it looks less like a dollar and more like a mutual fund. By stripping away the yield, the bill aims to keep stablecoins firmly in the “payment instrument” category, overseen by different rules than those governing investment products.
This development comes just as the SEC continues its aggressive sweep of the market, labeling various tokens as securities. The Clarity Act represents a legislative attempt to provide a “safe harbor” for stablecoins, but that harbor comes with a significant price tag for retail investors who were hoping to escape the low-interest environment of traditional banking.
For the issuers themselves—the Circles and Tetfeds of the world—the news is a double-edged sword. On one hand, it protects their biggest revenue stream. In a world of 4% or 5% interest rates, keeping the yield on tens of billions of dollars is a massive business. On the other hand, it removes the primary incentive for many retail users to hold these tokens during periods of market dormancy.
Institutional Shifts and the End of “Shadow Banking”
The move also addresses systemic risk concerns that have haunted the crypto space since the 2022 collapse of various yield-bearing platforms. By banning the distribution of yields, the government is essentially trying to prevent a resurgence of unregulated “shadow banking” where companies take customer deposits and gamble them in DeFi protocols to generate the promised returns.
This shift is part of a broader trend where long-term crypto investment goals are being redefined by institutional participation. Large-scale players are less interested in “staking” their stablecoins for a few percentage points of retail yield and more focused on using US-backed digital dollars for lightning-fast cross-border settlements and collateral management.
And yet, the ban leaves a massive hole in the market for retail-friendly decentralized finance. If the most “stable” assets in the ecosystem cannot legally offer a return, capital may flow back into more volatile assets or toward offshore providers that operate outside U.S. jurisdiction—a scenario the Treasury Department has repeatedly warned about.
Where the Yield Goes Now
So, where does the money go? If the issuer is sitting on a mountain of high-yield debt but can’t give it to the token holders, the profits likely head toward infrastructure, dividends for the company’s private shareholders, or potentially toward lowering transaction fees to the point of being negligible.
We are already seeing Ethereum refocus on scaling and security to accommodate this high-volume, low-margin future. If stablecoins become a pure utility with no “carry,” the competition will shift entirely to which network is the fastest, cheapest, and most secure for moving those tokens.
The legislation is expected to move to a floor vote by the end of the quarter. While industry lobbyists are still pushing for “rebate” models that might skirt the yield ban, the current language is remarkably airtight. For now, if you want a return on your digital dollars, you’ll have to take on the risk of the DeFi at your own peril, because the regulated “savings account” version is effectively dead on arrival.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why can’t I earn interest on my stablecoins under this new law?
The logic is about classification. If a stablecoin pays you a dividend or interest, regulators argue it behaves more like an investment security—such as a stock or a bond—than a currency. The Crypto Clarity Act wants stablecoins to be used for payments and trading, not as a speculative or passive income product that could sidestep existing banking and securities laws.
Does this mean stablecoin companies just get to keep all the profit?
Essentially, yes. Companies like Circle or Tether earn interest on the cash and government bonds they hold in reserve. Under this law, they are not allowed to share those earnings with you. They might use that money to improve their tech or pay their staff, but they cannot legally send a “yield” or “interest payment” to your wallet balance.
Are there still ways to get a yield on my crypto?
Yes, but not through a regulated stablecoin balance. You can still participate in decentralized finance (DeFi) protocols or “liquidity mining” on various blockchains. However, these activities carry much higher risk and won’t have the same legal protections or “stable” status that the Clarity Act is designed to provide for the broader US economy.
