The stablecoin community has recently found an unlikely ally in one of the loudest critics of Bitcoin (BTC) and cryptocurrencies. Peter Schiff, Founder and Chairman of Schiffgold, recently clapped back at Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan, for his comments against companies issuing these digital assets.
Over the past few months, Dimon has been letting off a tirade targeting stablecoin issuers. He argued that businesses offering to pay yields on simply holding these digital currencies should register as banks. The boss of the investment banking giant stated that only a bank should offer such incentives through deposits.
“If you want to be a bank, become a bank, then you can do what you want,” said Dimon.
Dimon highlighted that the same institutions must be subject to strict compliance rules. These include obtaining insurance from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), following Bank Secrecy Act/Anti-Money Laundering (BSA/AML) protocols, and maintaining capital, liquidity, and social requirements.
Schiff responded to Dimon, calling his arguments nonsense. He claimed that crypto companies offering interest-bearing products don’t need to go through the same capital and compliance requirements as banks.
The veteran gold investor commented that banks are FDIC-insured. Additionally, they make risky loans under a fractional reserve system. On the other hand, stablecoins don’t enjoy the same privilege as they don’t engage in similarly high-risk practices.
Stablecoins ensure and derive liquidity from their backing assets. These typically involve short-term US Treasuries and cash equivalents.
Unlike banks that lend out the vast majority of their customer deposits while keeping only a tiny fraction of the assets, stablecoin issuers hold a 1:1 ratio of liquid reserves against every token in circulation. For Schiff, the huge difference makes Dimon’s suggestions highly impractical as well as fundamentally and logically flawed.
Some members of Crypto Twitter were surprised at Schiff’s support for stablecoins, as he had consistently condemned all things related to Bitcoin and crypto. He notably engaged in debates with key personalities at Coinbase, Binance, and Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy).
Schiff clarified that he remains staunchly opposed to BTC and crypto. However, he differentiated stablecoins from them. The gold investor emphasized that these digital assets have real-world utility, something that BTC and other cryptocurrencies lack.
“Stable coins have a use case, and issuers are not banks, especially if the tokens are 100% backed by dollars and invested exclusively in Treasuries,” Schiff reiterated.
The post Stablecoins Find An Unlikely Ally In Peter Schiff appeared first on Blockzeit.


