A long-running fight over stablecoin yield may be moving toward a legislative compromise.
Senator Thom Tillis said he hopes to release draft language this week aimed at resolving one of the more stubborn disputes inside the Clarity Act, namely whether crypto companies should be allowed to pay interest on idle stablecoin balances.
According to Politico, Tillis has been working with Senator Angela Alsobrooks on the text, which he suggested could be made public later this week if talks continue to move smoothly.
This is not a minor drafting issue buried in the fine print. The yield question cuts straight into the uneasy line between banking and crypto. If stablecoin issuers or related platforms can offer interest on balances, banks tend to see that as a competitive threat wrapped in a payments product.
Crypto firms, on the other hand, tend to argue that preventing yield artificially limits how digital dollars can function.
That tension has lingered for months and, in some ways, it sits at the center of the broader policy struggle. Is a stablecoin just a digital payment rail, or can it also behave like a savings product?
Tillis appears to think the latest draft is getting close to an answer.
What matters here is not only the substance, but the stage of the conversation. Washington’s crypto debates often spend months circling big principles without producing workable text. A draft meant to settle the stablecoin yield issue suggests negotiations are becoming more concrete.
That does not guarantee the compromise will hold. Stablecoin policy still touches bank regulation, securities law, consumer protection and broader competition concerns. But if Tillis and Alsobrooks do release language this week, lawmakers and industry groups will finally have something more precise to fight over, support or try to amend.
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