Something huge just shifted in digital money and most crypto holders are still trading memes while the real disruption moves quietly on chain. JPMorgan just broughtSomething huge just shifted in digital money and most crypto holders are still trading memes while the real disruption moves quietly on chain. JPMorgan just brought

Banks Just Declared War On Stablecoins And Crypto Has No Idea What Is Coming

2025/12/16 16:23

Something huge just shifted in digital money and most crypto holders are still trading memes while the real disruption moves quietly on chain. JPMorgan just brought its $10 trillion per day payments machine into the same arena as USDC and USDT, but under rules that let it do 1 thing the stablecoin giants legally cannot: share the yield. This is not another altcoin narrative. This is the start of a structural fight over who gets to earn interest on trillions of tokenized dollars and who gets left holding non yielding bags.

JPM Coin, branded as JPMD on Coinbase’s Base network, is not a classic stablecoin. It is a tokenized bank deposit that sits directly on JPMorgan’s balance sheet as a claim on real bank money, and it can pay you normal bank interest while it sits in an approved wallet. JPMorgan describes JPMD as a USD deposit token for institutional clients that represents actual deposits and supports near instant transfers on Base 24/7. Deposits in JPMD earn interest the same way a regular institutional account would, with the twist that now those balances move across a public L2 instead of through closed bank rails. The crucial point is legal status: this is deposit money, not a money market style stablecoin, so interest to holders is expected, not forbidden.

Circle and Tether are stuck in a different legal box. USDC is structured as a fully reserved stablecoin, with Circle holding almost all reserves in cash and short term Treasuries and keeping the yield on those reserves as its primary business model. In Q3, Circle generated about $740 million in revenue and reserve income, with roughly 96% of that coming from interest on the Treasuries and cash that back USDC rather than from fees or subscriptions. That income flows to Circle’s bottom line because stablecoin frameworks and their own disclosures commit them to 1:1 redeemability and full collateralization, not to passing through interest to token holders. Tether’s model is similar: high yield on reserves, no yield for you.

That setup worked as long as banks were clumsy, regulators were hostile and tokenized dollars lived mostly outside the regulated core. Now the board has flipped. JPMorgan has turned JPMD into a bridge from its internal ledger to Base, effectively treating a public blockchain as an extension of its global cash management franchise. The bank processes about $10 trillion in traditional payments every day, and even a small fraction of that moving as tokenized deposits instantly creates a liquidity ocean that no standalone stablecoin issuer can match. Because these are regulated deposits, JPMorgan can legally offer rates like 4% on tokenized balances, while Circle and Tether cannot write “we will pay you 4% on USDC or USDT” without detonating their regulatory status.

This is where the “second stablecoin war” really begins. The first war pitted USDC against USDT in a race for mindshare, liquidity and integrations. Both sides played the same game: promise 1:1 backing, keep the yield from Treasuries, and fight on transparency, exchange listings and ecosystem deals. The new war is different. It is banks versus stablecoin issuers, with asymmetric weapons. Banks can tokenize insured deposits, plug directly into DeFi rails through permissioned wallets, and legally share the interest stream with customers. Stablecoins are locked into a non interest bearing structure where all that yield accrues to the issuer, not the holder.

Regulators are helping to tilt the field. New US rules created clear categories for “stablecoins” versus “deposit tokens” and encouraged highly regulated banks to issue tokenized money instead of letting non bank issuers dominate dollar rails. JPMorgan’s own white papers argue that bank issued deposit tokens are safer than independent stablecoins because they come with existing prudential oversight and, in many cases, deposit insurance. Once those same banks are allowed to pay competitive yields on tokenized balances, they can undercut Circle’s and Tether’s silent tax on users, where every $1 of stablecoin you hold is a free loan that lets the issuer keep the interest.

Circle’s financials show exactly what is at stake. When 96% of revenue comes from interest on reserves, any move that forces them to share that interest with users or compete with yield bearing bank tokens directly attacks the core economics of the business. A world where major banks offer 4% on tokenized deposits on public chains is a world where holding non yielding USDC or USDT starts to look like leaving rewards unclaimed. For trading firms, treasurers and DeFi protocols, the rational move is obvious: migrate collateral and settlement balances toward instruments that pay, provided they can still plug into the same on chain infrastructure.

The legal line is brutal in its simplicity: only 1 side can share the revenue. Bank issued deposit tokens like JPMD can pay interest as normal deposits while living on a public blockchain. Classical stablecoins like USDC and USDT are designed to be fully collateralized, non interest bearing claims whose issuers sit on the yield. That means the “second war” is not about branding or chain choice, it is about whether the future of on chain dollars belongs to highly regulated institutions that are finally stepping into crypto’s backyard or to the crypto native issuers that built the first generation of digital dollars but now cannot legally match the new offer. If banks win and absorb the yield business at scale, Circle and Tether do not just lose market share. They lose the economic engine that made stablecoins such a profitable corner of crypto in the first place.

Originally published at https://coinbasecorridor.blogspot.com on December 16, 2025.


Banks Just Declared War On Stablecoins And Crypto Has No Idea What Is Coming was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

Sorumluluk Reddi: Bu sitede yeniden yayınlanan makaleler, halka açık platformlardan alınmıştır ve yalnızca bilgilendirme amaçlıdır. MEXC'nin görüşlerini yansıtmayabilir. Tüm hakları telif sahiplerine aittir. Herhangi bir içeriğin üçüncü taraf haklarını ihlal ettiğini düşünüyorsanız, kaldırılması için lütfen service@support.mexc.com ile iletişime geçin. MEXC, içeriğin doğruluğu, eksiksizliği veya güncelliği konusunda hiçbir garanti vermez ve sağlanan bilgilere dayalı olarak alınan herhangi bir eylemden sorumlu değildir. İçerik, finansal, yasal veya diğer profesyonel tavsiye niteliğinde değildir ve MEXC tarafından bir tavsiye veya onay olarak değerlendirilmemelidir.

Ayrıca Şunları da Beğenebilirsiniz

Solana Faces Massive DDoS Attack Without Performance Issues

Solana Faces Massive DDoS Attack Without Performance Issues

Solana successfully countered a major DDoS attack without affecting users. The network maintained transaction confirmation times around 450 milliseconds. Continue
Paylaş
Coinstats2025/12/17 13:08
A ‘Star Wars’ Actor Rewrites The Entire New Trilogy They Starred In

A ‘Star Wars’ Actor Rewrites The Entire New Trilogy They Starred In

The post A ‘Star Wars’ Actor Rewrites The Entire New Trilogy They Starred In appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. It feels like we don’t hear all that much from actor John Boyega that much, outside of when he’s talking about Star Wars as of late. And in a recent Popverse interview, he went so far as to rework the entire trilogy, in terms of what he’d do differently, as he’s been vocal about what he believed went wrong with the original. Here’s what he said: “It would be mad. First of all, we’re not getting rid of Han Solo, Luke Skywalker, all these people. We’re not doing that. The first thing we’re going to do is fulfill their story, fulfill their legacy. We’re going to make a good moment of handing on the baton.” “Luke Skywalker wouldn’t be disappearing on a rock … Hell no. Standing there and he’s, like, a projector? I would want to give those characters way more way more” By the end of the trilogy, all three major Star Wars leads are dead. Han Solo killed by his son, Kylo Ren. Luke Skywalker fading into the ether after force projecting himself to face Kylo Ren. Leia had to be written off due to the tragic death of Carrie Fisher during the production of the trilogy. So Boyega would halt at least the first two deaths, as it did come off as strange that “passing the baton” was mainly killing all the big characters. He continues: “Our new characters will not be overpowered in these movies. They won’t just grab stuff and know what to do with it… No. You’ve got to struggle like every other character in this franchise.” This is likely a reference to both Rey and himself. Rey was frequently criticized as a “Mary Sue,” possessing immense power and skill in everything from flying to fighting to the force despite growing up as…
Paylaş
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/25 02:37
Discover Mono Protocol: The $2M-Backed Project Built to Simplify Development, Launch Faster, and Monetize Every Transaction

Discover Mono Protocol: The $2M-Backed Project Built to Simplify Development, Launch Faster, and Monetize Every Transaction

Developing in Web3 has often meant navigating fragmented systems, high transaction costs, and complex cross-chain infrastructure. Mono Protocol introduces a new approach that brings clarity and efficiency to this landscape. It focuses on three powerful outcomes: simplify development, launch faster, and monetize every transaction.  By unifying balances, streamlining execution, and integrating monetization at the core, […]
Paylaş
Cryptopolitan2025/09/18 21:28