Start now →

U.S. regulator's GENIUS pitch casts dark cloud over crypto sector's stablecoin model

By Jesse Hamilton · Published February 26, 2026 · 7 min read · Source: CoinDesk
RegulationStablecoinsMarket Analysis
PolicyShare this articleX (Twitter)LinkedInFacebookEmail

U.S. regulator's GENIUS pitch casts dark cloud over crypto sector's stablecoin model

The U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency proposed rules that would govern stablecoins, including apparent limits on rewards that may affect Coinbase.

By Jesse Hamilton|Edited by Nikhilesh DeUpdated Feb 26, 2026, 10:01 p.m. Published Feb 26, 2026, 9:58 p.m. GoogleMake us preferred on Google
Jonathan Gould (Nikhilesh De/CoinDesk)
Jonathan Gould's Office of the Comptroller of the Currency may have just proposed a rule that makes offering stablecoin rewards more difficult. (Nikhilesh De/CoinDesk)

What to know:

The crypto industry's stablecoin operations, such as the arrangement between issuer Circle and leading exchange Coinbase, could be under serious pressure in the U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency's newly proposed set of stablecoin rules.

Even as OCC chief Jonathan Gould testified in the U.S. Senate on issues that included crypto oversight on Thursday, people in the industry said they've been trying to understand his agency's 376-page proposal to regulate domestic issuers under the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins (GENIUS) Act that became law last year. The allowance of stablecoin yield and reward has not only been central to the GENIUS Act, but it's also been a chief negotiation point in the more important follow-up legislation known as the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act.

Close financial ties between issuers and crypto platforms that handle their tokens "would make it highly likely that the issuer’s payments of yield or interest would be made to the holder through an intermediary or an attempt the evade the GENIUS Act’s prohibition on interest and yield payments," the OCC proposal suggested.

The firms can rebut that presumption, the OCC said, "given the issuer provides sufficient evidence to the contrary."

On the controversial point of rewards, the industry has worked under an assumption that the GENIUS Act's ban on yield or rewards offered by stablecoin issuers doesn't extend to third parties that can offer their own rewards programs on those issuers' tokens, such as at Coinbase. But the OCC's proposed language assumes that the law's prohibition would be improperly evaded under certain third-party relationships, though the details are still being studied by crypto lobbyists and lawyers.

Industry insiders who requested anonymity acknowledged this opening effort looks bad, and they'll line up to try to get it changed, but some suggest the agency's wording may leave enough room that continued rewards could be manageable.

Todd Phillips, a former lawyer at the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and business professor in Georgia who tracks digital assets policy, agreed the proposed language doesn't seem like a hard no.

"I think there's some play in the joints of what the OCC has proposed," Phillips told CoinDesk on Thursday. He said the opening language seems uncertain on whether it means to "shut down all permutations of stablecoin rewards."

"The OCC has clearly gone beyond what the statute requires," Phillips said, adding that the extent of the restriction "is open to debate."

The agency didn't immediately respond to questions from CoinDesk.

The crypto industry's primary policy aim in Washington is to advance the Clarity Act's regulations for the overall U.S. digital asset markets. In that legislative negotiation, this issue of stablecoin yield has become one of the leading points of contention, with U.S. bankers arguing that such yield threatens their foundational dependence on customer deposits. During those talks, the crypto side has repeatedly argued that the GENIUS Act, as it stands, allows third party crypto firms to offer rewards on stablecoin holdings and activities.

One of the insiders in the negotiation told CoinDesk on Thursday that the OCC's action should undermine the banks' lobbying, because what's the point of hashing out stablecoin yield in further legislation when the banking regulator has already taken it up as a proposed rule? Despite that, they also said the OCC overreached, and the industry will likely fight the proposed rulemaking even as the Clarity Act continues its way through Congress.

Meanwhile, the proposals advanced by Gould — a former chief legal officer at Bitfury who has otherwise been strongly supportive of the crypto industry — casts some doubt on industry confidence that GENIUS will protect stablecoin rewards programs, which represents a significant business at Coinbase. The U.S. crypto exchange hasn't yet made any public statements, and a company spokesperson declined to comment.

The proposed rulemaking from the OCC, which charters and oversees national banks and trusts in the U.S., is preliminary, opening the ideas to a public comment period that would later have to be followed up with a final rulemaking process. With controversial rules, this process usually requires months of discussion and review.

If the OCC does cut off the ability of crypto platforms to extend stablecoin yield to customers, it may eliminate one of the Clarity Act sticking points, though other matters are also still standing in the way of the bill. Democratic lawmakers have insisted — for instance — that the legislation address potential conflicts of interest posed by senior government officials, such as President Donald Trump, personally profiting from the crypto industry.

At a Thursday hearing before the Senate Banking Committee, stablecoin rewards came up often as a business that scares the banking industry. Regulators suggested they haven't yet seen a flight of deposits from banks.

"We have to take these concerns, the concerns of community banks, especially seriously," said Senator Angela Alsobrooks, a Democrat who sought to negotiate a compromise in the Clarity Act to ban the crypto industry from rewards on stablecoin holdings in a way that resembles a deposit account. So far, negotiations among the political parties, the banks, the crypto industry and the White House haven't yet advanced to a compromise that can get to a vote in the Senate.

Read More: OCC pitches stablecoin rules as U.S. Senate holds banking hearing in which crypto stars

StablecoinsCoinbaseOffice of the Comptroller of the CurrencyRegulationsMarket Structure Legislation

More For You

UK investors have just one month to add crypto ETNs in tax-free wrapper: FT

By Jamie Crawley|Edited by Sheldon Reback5 hours agoHMRC (Shutterstock, modified by CoinDesk)

The lifting of the ban on retail investors accessing crypto ETNs was seen as a major win in the adoption of crypto investments due to the possibility of it being added to products like ISAs.

What to know:

Read full storyLatest Crypto News MARA Holdings CEO Fred Thiel, at the Bitcoin conference in Miami (CoinDesk)

Bitcoin Miner MARA jumps 17% after striking a deal with Starwood to build AI data centers

4 minutes ago
Grant Cardone (Cardone Capital)

Grant Cardone plans to tokenize his firm's $5 billion real estate portfolio

1 hour ago
Justin Drake (Getty Images)

Here is why Ethereum's bold new plan could make the blockchain giant high-speed 'internet of value' by 2029

1 hour ago
(Image via Shutterstock)

A new bipartisan bill wants to ensure the next century of tech is written in America

2 hours ago
Crypto general

Crypto social isn’t dead, it’s just changing hands

3 hours ago
Blockchain Technology

AI rout hits software stocks, but Grayscale says blockchains stand to benefit

3 hours ago
Top StoriesVitalik Buterin (CoinDesk)

Vitalik Buterin unveils Ethereum roadmap to counter quantum computing threat

3 hours ago
Bitcoin Logo (CoinDesk)

Here is why the wild accusations of Jane Street rigging bitcoin price may not be true

11 hours ago
Bitcoin clawed back above $20,000 after falling below this threshold. (Frederick Bass/Getty Images)

Bitcoin falls back below $67,000, rapidly giving back Wednesday's gains

6 hours ago
Jeremy Allaire, Co-Founder, Chairman and CEO, Circle Speaks at Hong Kong Fintech Week in 2024 (HK Fintech Week)

Circle's post-earnings surge nears 50% as short squeeze, not strong financials, fuels rally

4 hours ago
Hacker sitting in a room

Crypto investigator ZachXBT alleges trading platform Axiom's employee conducted insider trading

7 hours ago
U.S. Comptroller of the Currency Jonathan Gould

OCC pitches stablecoin rules as U.S. Senate holds banking hearing in which crypto stars

6 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 →