Start now →

JPMorgan CFO warns stablecoins risk becoming ‘regulatory arbitrage’ play

By Helene Braun · Published April 14, 2026 · 5 min read · Source: CoinDesk
RegulationStablecoins
FinanceShare this articleX (Twitter)LinkedInFacebookEmail

JPMorgan CFO warns stablecoins risk becoming ‘regulatory arbitrage’ play

During the bank's earnings call on Tuesday, JPMorgan CFO Jeremy Barnum warned that stablecoins could become a tool for regulatory arbitrage unless they are held to the same strict oversight and consumer protection standards as traditional bank deposits.

By Helene Braun|Edited by Sheldon Reback Apr 14, 2026, 1:50 p.m. Make preferred on
(Getty Images)
(Getty Images)

What to know:

JPMorgan Chase Chief Financial Officer Jeremy Barnum said stablecoins may evolve into a form of regulatory arbitrage if new rules fail to align them with traditional banking standards.

Speaking on the bank’s first-quarter earnings call on Tuesday, Barnum framed the debate less as a technology shift and more as a question of oversight. Some stablecoin models could replicate bank-like products while avoiding the safeguards applied to deposits, including rules around interest payments and customer protections, he said.

“If the same product isn’t regulated the same way, you open the door to arbitrage,” Barnum said, pointing to structures that offer rewards resembling yield. In that scenario, he added, firms could “run a bank” without being subject to core banking regulations.

The comments come as lawmakers weigh new frameworks for digital assets. The proposed Clarity Act aims to define how crypto markets are split between regulators such as the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. It also reflects broader efforts to establish clearer rules for stablecoins and related products.

The debate also extends to whether issuers of stablecoins, crypto tokens whose value is pegged to a traditional asset, mostly the dollar, should be allowed to offer yield to users.

Some crypto firms, including Coinbase (COIN), have pushed for the ability to pass interest earned on reserve assets to coin holders, arguing it would make stablecoins more useful as savings tools.

Banks have pushed back, saying yield-bearing stablecoins begin to resemble deposits without the same capital, liquidity and consumer protection requirements. In their view, that creates an uneven playing field, allowing non-bank firms to attract funds by offering returns regulated banks are restricted from providing.

The issue has become a central point of tension in Washington D.C., as policymakers weigh how to prevent stablecoins from functioning as bank-like products outside the traditional regulatory perimeter.

Barnum said JPMorgan supports the push for clarity, but stressed that consistency matters more than speed. Without it, he warned, new entrants could gain an advantage by operating outside existing regulatory boundaries.

He downplayed the idea that stablecoins will disrupt the bank’s core payments business. JPMorgan already runs a large wholesale payments network that processes transactions at low cost and high speed, leaving little room for margin-driven disruption.

Instead, the bank is integrating similar technology into its own systems. Through its blockchain unit, Kinexys, JPMorgan has developed tools such as JPM Coin and tokenized deposits, which allow institutional clients to move money around the clock and automate transactions.

Barnum described these efforts as part of a broader modernization strategy. Features often associated with stablecoins, such as programmable payments, are already being built into existing infrastructure rather than replacing it.

On the consumer side, he said stablecoins are often framed as “digital cash,” but still face familiar compliance hurdles, including identity checks.

JPMorgan reported stronger-than-expected first-quarter results, driven by a rebound in trading and investment banking. Net income rose 13% year over year to $16.49 billion, while revenue climbed 10% to $50.54 billion. The bank set aside less for potential loan losses than expected, signaling stable credit conditions among borrowers.


StablecoinsJPMorgan

More For You

Tether introduces crypto wallet to bring stablecoin and bitcoin payments directly to users

By Krisztian Sandor|Edited by Stephen Alpher1 hour ago
Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino at White House

The stablecoin issuer's crypto wallet lets users send digital dollars, tokenized gold and bitcoin without intermediaries or gas tokens across multiple blockchains.

What to know:

Read full storyLatest Crypto News CoinDesk

CoinDesk 20 performance update: Ethereum (ETH) price rises 5.4%

42 minutes ago
A padlock secures a gate hasp. (Shutterstock)

XRP Ledger adds zero-knowledge proofs targeting institutional privacy gap

1 hour ago
Billions of stars

From DeFi to deep space: How SkyMapper and Avalanche are securing the world's telescope records

1 hour ago
Bitcoin bus (Olivier Acuna/CoinDesk)

Bitcoin rises to one-month high above $75,000 as analysts eye major breakout

1 hour ago
Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino at White House

Tether introduces crypto wallet to bring stablecoin and bitcoin payments directly to users

1 hour ago
Cuy Sheffield, the head of Visa's Crypto team (Visa)

Visa throws its weight behind Stripe’s Tempo blockchain

1 hour ago
Top StoriesPrice Performance Since Halving (Glassnode)

Bitcoin passes halfway point in halving cycle as price gains trail prior cycles

1 hour ago
Kraken on phone (PiggyBank/ Unsplash)

Deutsche Börse takes 1.5% stake in crypto exchange Kraken for $200 million

3 hours ago
Strategy Executive Chairman Michael Saylor on CoinDesk Television

Strategy's STRC sees record-breaking trading day, may surpass that on Tuesday

4 hours ago
Nikita Bier. (source: lightspeed ventures)

Nikita Bier says crypto has had a rough year, hints at building something new as X Money launch nears

7 hours ago
Bitcoin hero image

Here are key bitcoin price levels to watch as the rally gathers steam

5 hours ago
(Bored Ape Yacht Club, modified by CoinDesk)

NFT bull Steve Aoki sells his SHIB, ETH, and PEPE. His Bored Apes are down 88%.

7 hours ago
This article was originally published on CoinDesk and is republished here under RSS syndication for informational purposes. All rights and intellectual property remain with the original author. If you are the author and wish to have this article removed, please contact us at [email protected].

NexaPay — Accept Card Payments, Receive Crypto

No KYC · Instant Settlement · Visa, Mastercard, Apple Pay, Google Pay

Get Started →