Yield-Bearing Stablecoins Are Eating Traditional Banking’s Lunch - And Banks Can’t Handle It
Wall Street's latest temper tantrum targets the most innovative development in digital finance.
The Disruption They Saw Coming
Yield-bearing stablecoins aren't just evolving digital assets - they're systematically dismantling the traditional banking profit model. While legacy institutions collect massive spreads on customer deposits, decentralized protocols share revenue directly with token holders.
Banking's Obsolete Playbook
Instead of innovating, major financial institutions deploy their usual strategy: regulatory complaints and fear campaigns. They're fighting the same battle they lost against peer-to-peer payments and mobile banking - and the outcome looks equally inevitable.
Financial Darwinism in Action
The market has spoken. Billions in capital continues migrating toward protocols offering real yield rather than the symbolic interest rates from traditional savings accounts. Banks clinging to their 20th-century business model might want to check which century we're actually living in.
Another case of established players confusing their comfort with consumer preference - while the revolution builds in plain sight.
Why banks don’t like yield-bearing stablecoins
Strip away the rhetoric about consumer protection, and the real reason banks fear yield-bearing stablecoins becomes obvious: money. Every time a customer swipes a card, banks pocket a fee. Every time someone leaves idle cash in a low-yield checking account, banks profit by reinvesting that money at higher rates. Stablecoins threaten both of those income streams. The fight is about protecting $200 billion in annual bank revenues. These concerns are understandable, but lobbying to keep the playing field in the banking sector’s favor will end up making the U.S. less competitive in the long run.
The danger, after all, is that U.S. banks and regulators will stifle innovation and push it offshore. In a global financial system, consumers and investors are no longer limited to domestic products. If the U.S. prevents yield-bearing stablecoins from existing at home, customers will simply turn to foreign issuers.
That would be a lose-lose scenario: U.S. consumers would still access these products, but the innovation, tax base, and regulatory oversight would migrate abroad. Meanwhile, domestic banks would continue to lag, hiding behind regulatory capture instead of competing on product quality. We’ve already seen this scenario bear out to some degree with stablecoins that don’t offer any yield: Tether, a stablecoin firm headquartered in El Salvador, undeniably dominates the field to this day.
If the U.S. banks want to remain competitive, they need to stop lobbying against innovation. Nothing stops them from issuing their own stablecoins or partnering with fintech firms in order to do so. The only thing holding them back is inertia, and dare we say, a certain complacency.
Their arguments aren’t convincing
What about the banks’ claims that yield-bearing stablecoins threaten the stability of the financial system?
This argument is nonsensical for the simple reason that American customers already have access to high-yield financial instruments. Money market funds, treasury bills, and brokered deposits offer yields far higher than the average checking account. In fact, many banks themselves already give customers the ability to sweep idle cash into money market funds without ever leaving their app.
So the notion that stablecoins are somehow unleashing a dangerous new type of financial product is misleading, to say the least. Yield-bearing products already function within the broader financial system. The only difference is that stablecoins operate on blockchain rails, making them more accessible and more efficient than the legacy banking system.
Similarly, one of the favorite arguments from bank lobbyists is that stablecoins will drain deposits from banks, crippling their ability to lend. That verges on fear-mongering.
Banks do rely on deposits, but they also fund loans through wholesale markets: repos, commercial paper, and interbank lending. If some deposits shift into stablecoins, banks can easily tap these other sources of liquidity. The idea that a marginal decline in deposits equals a credit crunch is flat-out wrong.
History bears this out. For decades, money market funds, prepaid cards, brokerage sweep accounts, and fintech apps have diverted customer funds away from banks. Yet the lending market has remained robust. Stablecoins are just the newest competitor in a long line of innovations that nibble at deposits without breaking the system.
Banks are terrible at predicting how tech will impact finance
This isn’t the first time banks have made apocalyptic claims about new financial instruments. When money market funds were first introduced in the 1970s, banks warned of the impending collapse of traditional banking. Policymakers were told that allowing money market funds would unleash chaos on the financial system.
What actually happened? Deposits did FLOW out of banks, but the system adapted. Banks responded by introducing new products, adjusting their funding mix, and finding ways to compete. The financial system evolved.
The lesson from the 1970s is simple: innovations that pass yield to consumers don’t destroy banks; they push them to innovate. Yield-bearing stablecoins are just a 21st-century version of money market funds. They represent a new type of financial instrument that forces legacy players to modernize.
Banks need to quit whining and compete
At its heart, this debate is about the spirit of competition. Stablecoins are simply the latest in a long series of innovations (credit cards, online brokerage accounts, fintech apps, etc) that banks initially resisted but ultimately learned to coexist with. Each time, the predictions of doom proved false. Each time, the financial system adapted.
Yield-bearing stablecoins will be no different. They won’t collapse the banking system. They will challenge it. And in the long run, that’s a good thing.
Banks can continue to waste energy lobbying Congress and regulators to protect their turf. Or they can embrace the future, innovate, and actually compete for customers on merit. If they truly believe in the strength of American finance, the choice should be obvious.
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Harbind Likhari is the chief product officer of MNEE, a platform developing an incentive-driven stablecoin payments infrastructure for merchant applications.