The stablecoin fight is now about who gets paid | FOMO Daily
10 min read
The stablecoin fight is now about who gets paid
The CLARITY Act stablecoin debate is shifting from a simple argument about yield to a much bigger fight over who captures the economics of digital dollars. Issuers, banks, exchanges, wallets, asset managers and payment networks are all trying to control the value created by regulated stablecoin infrastructure.
Stablecoins started out as a simple idea. One digital token, backed by one real dollar or dollar-like asset, moving around the internet faster than the old banking system. That was the clean sales pitch. Fast money. Programmable money. Dollar money without waiting for bank hours. But once regulation starts turning these tokens into formal payment instruments, the simple story gets harder. The problem is that a stablecoin might look boring on the surface, but underneath it sits a whole machine of reserves, custody, treasury bills, distribution deals, wallets, bank partners and payment rails. That machine can produce real money. If the user is not allowed to receive direct yield from the issuer, the value does not disappear. It just moves somewhere else. That is why the CLARITY Act debate matters. It is not only a crypto regulation story. It is a fight over the plumbing of the next version of the dollar.
The yield ban sounds simple until it meets reality
The basic idea behind the stablecoin yield ban is easy enough to understand. A payment stablecoin is meant to work like a payment tool, not like a savings account or an investment product. So lawmakers have tried to stop stablecoin issuers from paying people interest just for holding the token. On paper, that sounds neat. Keep stablecoins for payments. Keep banks for deposits. Keep money market funds for yield. But real markets are rarely that tidy. If an issuer cannot pay yield directly, a wallet might offer rewards. An exchange might offer fee discounts. A payment app might offer cash-back style benefits. A bank partner might package stablecoin settlement into treasury services. A card network might capture the benefit through faster settlement and lower operational costs. What this really means is that banning one form of yield does not automatically remove the economic value. It only decides who is allowed to touch it first.
Stablecoins are not magic internet dollars floating around with no foundation. The regulated model is built around reserves. Those reserves can include cash, bank deposits, short-term Treasuries, government money market funds and other approved liquid assets. When those assets earn income, someone captures that income. This is where things change. The user may see a simple stable digital dollar in a wallet, but the companies behind the scenes see reserve income, management fees, custody arrangements, redemption obligations and distribution agreements. If a stablecoin has billions of dollars in circulation, even a modest return on the backing assets becomes a serious business line. That is why stablecoin regulation is not only about consumer protection. It is also about the commercial structure of digital money. Whoever controls the reserves and the customer relationship controls a large part of the economics.
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The user may not see the real deal
Most ordinary users do not think about reserve funds, payment bases or custody structures. They just want the token to be worth one dollar, move quickly, and not blow up. Fair enough too. But behind that clean user experience, the value can be split up in ways most people never see. An issuer might keep part of the income. A large exchange might receive a share because it brings users and balances. A wallet provider might get paid because it controls distribution. An asset manager might earn fees for handling reserve assets. A custodian might earn fees for safekeeping. A payment network might use stablecoins to make settlement smoother. None of this has to look like interest paid to a retail holder. That is the heart of the issue. The user holds the digital dollar, but the economics may flow around them.
Exchanges and wallets become the new battleground
The next big question is whether exchanges and wallets should be allowed to pass some of that value back to users. Banks argue that if crypto platforms can offer rewards through the side door, then the issuer yield ban becomes weak. Crypto firms argue that rewards and incentives are normal parts of modern financial competition and that the law should not protect banks from better products. Both sides know what is at stake. If platforms can reward stablecoin balances, stablecoins become more attractive compared with ordinary bank deposits. If they cannot, then banks keep more of the advantage in holding everyday cash balances. The fight is not really about a tiny line of legal wording. It is about whether digital wallets become the new front door to money.
Banks understand this fight because deposits are their fuel. Traditional banks take deposits and use them to support lending. If large amounts of money move into stablecoins, banks worry they could lose low-cost funding. That could make loans more expensive or harder to supply, especially if the movement happens quickly in a stressed market. The banking argument is that stablecoins should not be allowed to act like high-yield deposits without being regulated like banks. The crypto argument is that banks have had comfortable control of the payment system for a long time, and stablecoins are finally bringing competition. This is where the debate gets sharp. Both sides talk about consumer protection, but both sides are also defending business models.
Payment rails may capture the quiet win
There is another part of the story that does not always get enough attention. Stablecoins are not just competing with bank deposits. They are also being pulled into payment infrastructure. That matters because payment rails are where huge amounts of economic value can be captured quietly. Faster settlement, weekend availability, treasury automation, lower friction and programmable money movement can all be valuable even if the end user never receives a visible yield payment. A business may care less about earning interest and more about settling faster. A fintech may care about liquidity timing. A payment network may care about modernising settlement without changing what the cardholder sees. This is the quiet win. Stablecoins can become infrastructure before they become mainstream savings tools.
For years, stablecoins lived in a strange middle ground. They were central to crypto trading, DeFi and cross-border movement, but they were not fully settled inside the regulated financial system. That is now changing. The U.S. is trying to bring payment stablecoins inside a formal framework with reserve rules, redemption rules, risk controls, custody standards and supervision. That gives stablecoins more legitimacy, but it also makes them less rebellious. Once a stablecoin is treated as regulated payment infrastructure, the fight becomes more like traditional finance. Who gets the account? Who holds the reserve? Who manages the assets? Who owns the customer? Who collects the fee? Who gets the data? The old crypto dream was about cutting out middlemen. The regulated stablecoin economy may create a new class of middlemen instead.
The digital dollar is becoming a business model
The bigger story is that the dollar itself is being rebuilt into a digital business model. That does not mean the U.S. dollar is going away. It means more dollar activity may move through tokenised systems, wallets, apps, settlement networks and blockchain-based rails. Every layer creates a chance for someone to charge, save, earn, route or control. That is why the stablecoin fight feels bigger than normal crypto politics. It is about who owns the customer relationship in a digital-dollar world. If users access money through wallets instead of banks, wallets gain power. If exchanges control balances, exchanges gain power. If banks issue tokenised deposits, banks keep power. If payment networks control settlement access, payment networks stay central. The token is only the surface. The real battle is the network around it.
The risk is value moving away from users
The uncomfortable part is that the user may end up with the least power. If direct yield is banned, and indirect rewards are restricted, then users may hold digital dollars that create income for everyone except them. Issuers, custodians, platforms, banks and payment networks may all benefit from the reserves and settlement efficiencies, while the holder gets convenience but no direct share of the return. That might still be useful if the product is fast, safe and cheap. But it raises a fair question. If digital dollars are backed by income-producing assets, and users supply the demand that makes the system valuable, should all the economics be captured above their heads? This is where the consumer argument becomes important. The policy debate cannot only be banks versus crypto firms. It also has to ask what ordinary users get out of the deal.
The key issue now is indirect yield. If the rules allow third-party rewards, the advantage goes to platforms with big user bases, strong wallets, deep liquidity and strong brand trust. Exchanges, payment apps and fintechs could use rewards, fee offsets and loyalty-style benefits to attract balances. If the rules shut that down, banks and tokenised deposit providers gain a clearer path. That would push digital-dollar economics back toward regulated banking products and away from crypto-native platforms. Neither path is neutral. One path favours platform competition. The other favours bank stability. The hard part is finding a line that protects the financial system without freezing out better payment products.
The stablecoin winner may not be the issuer
A lot of people look at stablecoins and assume the issuer is the main winner. Sometimes that is true. But the long-term winner could be whoever controls distribution. The company with the wallet, the user interface, the merchant relationship, the card connection or the bank partnership may capture more power than the company minting the token. That is how finance often works. The product matters, but distribution usually matters more. A stablecoin issuer can create the asset, but a platform can decide where users hold it, how they move it, what rewards they see and what other services are bundled around it. This is why the CLARITY Act debate is about more than legal wording. It could decide whether the future digital-dollar economy is issuer-led, bank-led, exchange-led, wallet-led or payment-network-led.
The next stage will be messy because everyone has something to lose. Banks do not want stablecoins turning into lightly regulated high-yield deposit rivals. Crypto platforms do not want the most attractive user incentives stripped away. Issuers do not want their growth channels narrowed. Payment networks want stablecoins inside settlement without blowing up the existing system. Regulators want innovation, but they also want control, visibility and crisis management tools. What this really means is that stablecoins are growing up. The wild west phase is ending. The infrastructure phase is starting. The market will not just be judged by who has the biggest token supply. It will be judged by who owns the rails, who owns the user, and who gets paid when digital dollars move.
The real story is control
The stablecoin debate is easy to misunderstand if it is framed only as a fight over yield. Yield is the front door issue. Control is the real house. The fight is about whether digital dollars become open payment tools, bank-controlled instruments, exchange-driven balance products, or payment network infrastructure. It is about whether users receive a fair share of the economics, or whether the value gets captured by the plumbing. It is also about whether regulators can write rules that understand modern financial products without accidentally protecting old business models. Stablecoins are no longer a side story in crypto. They are becoming one of the clearest signs that money itself is being rebuilt for the internet. The big question now is not whether digital dollars will matter. They already do. The question is who gets the benefit when those dollars move.
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