CLARITY Act stablecoin earnings are facing a late-April policy test after reported Senate timing collided with public House bill text that already bars issuers from paying yield to holders, putting reserve-income models tied to Coinbase and USDC under fresh pressure.
What the late-April Senate window does, and does not, confirm
The clearest verified point is in the public House stablecoin bill text: a permitted payment stablecoin issuer may not pay interest or yield to holders of its payment stablecoins. That language is already visible in the public document, while the Senate-side CLARITY timetable remains only partially verified.
FinTech Weekly reported on March 30, 2026 that the Senate Banking Committee is targeting a late-April CLARITY Act markup and that the working draft keeps bank-friendly yield restrictions in place during recess. No official committee calendar notice was directly fetched, so the exact deadline still belongs in the category of reported timing rather than confirmed scheduling.
Why Coinbase and USDC make the earnings risk easy to measure
The earnings angle is easier to verify than the Senate calendar. Coinbase told investors in its SEC-filed shareholder letter that stablecoin revenue reached $1.3488 billion for FY2025, showing how much reserve income is already embedded in one of the market’s biggest distribution platforms.
The same filing said $364 million of stablecoin revenue arrived in Q4 2025, while average USDC held in Coinbase products rose 18% quarter over quarter to $17.8 billion. That $17.8 billion balance matters because a final ban on holder yield would narrow how exchanges and issuers can share reserve economics without redesigning the product.
Market scale explains why the fight is larger than one company line item. DefiLlama’s stablecoin data showed about $315.0 billion of stablecoins outstanding and roughly $77.29 billion of USDC outstanding on April 1, 2026, which is why the verified evidence points to earnings compression risk, not a proven collapse.
That policy sensitivity is landing in a tape already driven by macro and geopolitical headlines. CoinLive has also been tracking how Bitcoin’s April rally faces a key Fed date after historic gains, how Bitcoin rose after Trump delayed Iran strikes, and why Ripple’s XRP treasury push keeps the utility side of crypto policy in focus.
What to watch before the policy window closes
The next hard signal is not commentary but an official Senate Banking Committee calendar entry or markup notice. Until that appears, the safer reading is that the yield ban is confirmed in public House text, while the late-April CLARITY window is a credible but still reported timeline.
A single late-March FinTech Weekly report also said negotiators were testing a compromise that would permit narrow activity-based rewards while blocking balance-based yield across affiliates. Because that draft was not directly retrieved, that detail should be treated as unconfirmed reporting rather than settled legislative text.
Even if Congress advances the package, implementation timing still matters. The public bill says the relevant section would take effect on the earlier of 12 months after enactment or 120 days after final implementing regulations, which means reserve-yield products could face compression well before the market has fully repriced the change.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.