The American Bankers Association (ABA) has formally declared the prohibition of stablecoin yields a top legislative priority for 2026, intensifying the turf war between traditional lenders and the $300 billion digital dollar market.
In its 2026 Blueprint for Growth released this week, the nation’s largest banking lobby explicitly called on Congress to close regulatory gaps that allow stablecoin issuers to offer returns. The ABA argues that yield-bearing stablecoins function as deposit substitutes without adhering to the capital requirements or insurance mandates governing commercial banks.
The GENIUS Act’s prohibition on a payment stablecoin issuer paying interest… reflects Congress’s intent for payment stablecoins to be used for transactions and not as investment vehicles. Treasury must reinforce this intent.
The $6 Trillion Risk
The ABA’s offensive aligns with dire warnings from Wall Street’s top brass. Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan, speaking to analysts on January 15, cited Treasury Department data suggesting up to $6 trillion in commercial bank deposits could migrate to stablecoins if interest-bearing models remain unchecked. Moynihan warned that such a flight would force banks to rely on costlier wholesale funding, directly reducing their capacity to underwrite mortgages and small business loans.
The policy push specifically targets what the ABA describes as a “loophole” where issuers avoid direct yield payments but facilitate returns through third-party exchanges or reward programs. This distinction puts protocols like Ethena (ENA) and Ondo Finance (ONDO), which tokenize yield-bearing assets, directly in the crosshairs.
Market Reaction & Counter-Narrative
Governance tokens tied to yield-focused protocols showed mixed reactions to the intensifying regulatory heat. Ethena (ENA) traded down to $0.18 (-3.6%), struggling to find support as the broader DeFi sector faces headwinds. Conversely, Ondo Finance (ONDO) held steady at $0.34 (+1.5%), suggesting the market views its institutional-grade compliance structure as a potential defensive moat.
Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire, speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, dismissed the banking sector’s existential dread. Allaire labeled fears of a stablecoin-induced bank run “completely absurd,” arguing that digital dollars increase the velocity of money and settlement efficiency rather than merely cannibalizing savings accounts.
The ABA’s move signals that 2026 will be defined by the legislative battle over whether stablecoins remain inert payment rails or evolve into yield-generating competitors to the checking account.