Tim Scott expects stablecoin yield compromise proposal by week’s end

Senator Tim Scott, chair of the Senate Banking Committee, says he expects to receive a compromise proposal on stablecoin yield provisions before the end of this week. If that timeline holds, it would mark a significant step toward resolving the single biggest sticking point that has stalled US stablecoin regulation for months.

The yield question — whether stablecoin issuers should be allowed to pass interest earnings back to token holders — has been the legislative equivalent of a kitchen renovation that keeps finding new problems behind the walls. Everyone agrees the work needs doing. Nobody can agree on the plumbing.

Why yield is the sticking point

Here’s the thing. Stablecoin issuers like Circle and Tether hold tens of billions of dollars in US Treasuries and other short-term instruments as reserves backing their tokens. Those reserves generate yield. Right now, issuers keep that income — it’s how they make money.

The debate in Congress centers on whether issuers should be permitted to share some of that yield with stablecoin holders, essentially turning stablecoins into something that looks a lot like a savings account or money market fund.

Banks hate this idea, for obvious reasons. If a stablecoin on your phone pays 4% while your checking account pays 0.01%, the competitive dynamics get uncomfortable fast. Traditional finance lobbyists have pushed hard to either ban yield-bearing stablecoins outright or subject them to full banking regulation.

Crypto advocates argue the opposite: blocking yield means protecting bank margins at the expense of consumers. In their view, stablecoin yield is just passing along what the market already generates, and restricting it would hobble the entire value proposition of dollar-denominated digital assets.

The compromise Scott expects to review will presumably try to thread this needle. The details haven’t leaked yet, but prior discussions have floated options ranging from yield caps to requiring issuers to obtain specific licenses before offering interest to holders.

The broader legislative picture

Stablecoin regulation has been Congress’s most promising crypto legislation for the better part of two years. The GENIUS Act, which would create a federal framework for stablecoin issuance, passed out of the Senate Banking Committee earlier this year but stalled on the Senate floor amid bipartisan concerns about anti-money laundering provisions and — you guessed it — the yield question.

The stablecoin market itself isn’t waiting around. Total stablecoin market capitalization sits above $230B, with Tether’s USDT alone accounting for roughly $140B. Circle’s USDC commands about $55B. These are no longer niche instruments. They process more transaction volume than many traditional payment networks.

Scott has made stablecoin legislation a stated priority for this Congress, and the timeline pressure is real. Legislative windows in Washington close faster than they open, and midterm positioning will start consuming oxygen soon enough.

What this means for investors

If the compromise leans toward permitting yield — even in a restricted form — it would be a significant catalyst for stablecoin adoption. A regulated, yield-bearing dollar stablecoin would compete directly with money market funds, savings accounts, and Treasury bills for retail capital. That’s a massive addressable market.

For existing stablecoin issuers, the regulatory clarity alone would be valuable regardless of the yield specifics. Institutional players have consistently cited regulatory uncertainty as their primary barrier to deeper stablecoin integration.

The risk, as always, is that compromise means nobody gets what they actually want. A framework so restrictive that yield-bearing stablecoins become impractical would satisfy banks but potentially push innovation offshore. A framework too permissive could trigger a separate fight with the SEC over whether yield-bearing stablecoins constitute securities.

Watch for the actual text of the proposal. The difference between “issuers may offer yield with a state license” and “issuers may offer yield with a federal banking charter” is the difference between a functioning market and a regulatory moat.

Bottom line: Scott’s timeline suggests real momentum on the most contested element of US stablecoin policy. A compromise landing on his desk doesn’t mean legislation passes tomorrow, but it means the adults in the room have at least agreed on what the argument is actually about. For an industry that’s spent years waiting for Washington to catch up, that counts as progress.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Estefano Gomez. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

Source: https://cryptobriefing.com/tim-scott-stablecoin-yield-compromise/