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Jamie Dimon says JPMorgan will ‘fight’ CLARITY Act stablecoin provisions

By Adewale Olarinde · Published May 29, 2026 · 2 min read · Source: AMBCrypto
RegulationStablecoins

JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said banks will oppose parts of the proposed CLARITY Act, escalating tensions between traditional financial institutions and the crypto industry over stablecoin regulation in the United States. Speaking during an interview at the Reagan National Economic Forum, Dimon criticized provisions that could allow stablecoin issuers to offer interest-like rewards without the same regulatory obligations as banks. "If he takes deposits like a bank, he should have bank rules," Dimon said, referring to crypto platforms, especially Coinbase and Brian Armstrong. He argued banks already operate under extensive: liquidity, capital, anti-money laundering, reporting, and consumer protection requirements. Dimon said stablecoin issuers should face comparable standards if they effectively function as payment or deposit platforms. JPMorgan says banks "will not accept" current framework Dimon directly criticized the direction of the legislation when asked whether he supported how the CLARITY Act was evolving. No," he said. "The banks will not accept it that way. He specifically pointed to concerns around: AML and KYC enforcement, stablecoin-linked deposit competition, and the absence of protections comparable to traditional banking oversight. Dimon added: We'll fight it. If we lose, we lose, and we'll live. The comments represent one of the clearest signs yet that large U.S. banks may actively push back against parts of Washington's emerging crypto market structure framework. The CLARITY Act has become one of the most closely watched digital asset bills in Congress after lawmakers advanced the legislation through a key Senate markup vote earlier this month. Dimon still backs blockchain technology Despite his criticism, Dimon did not reject blockchain infrastructure itself. During the interview, he described blockchain as a "legitimate technology" and acknowledged that stablecoins could become useful for various services. JPMorgan already operates blockchain-based payment infrastructure through its JPM Coin and deposit-token systems aimed at institutional settlement. Dimon argued the broader concern centers on regulatory parity rather than banning crypto-related products outright. "I believe it's a free country," he said when discussing cryptocurrency usage. Debate reflects growing payments competition The interview also highlighted increasing competition between banks, fintech firms, and crypto platforms over the future of payments and deposits. The remarks come as lawmakers, banks, fintech companies, and crypto firms continue to debate how stablecoins should fit into the U.S. financial system. Final Summary Jamie Dimon said JPMorgan and other banks will "fight" parts of the CLARITY Act tied to stablecoin regulation. The JPMorgan CEO argued stablecoin issuers should face banking-style oversight if they function like deposit and payment platforms.

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