Sen. Thom Tillis is back at the center of the stablecoin-yield draft fight, with Senate negotiators trying to settle how crypto firms can offer user rewards without turning stablecoin balances into bank-like interest products.
Crypto in America reported on March 30, 2026 that senators expected final stablecoin-yield text that week, and the outlet said a Tillis spokesperson described the revision as the product of talks with industry stakeholders, including banks.
Draft Text Tries to Define the Line on Yield
FinTech Weekly reported on March 24, 2026 that a stakeholder draft would bar digital asset service providers and affiliates from offering yield on stablecoin balances, or anything economically equivalent to bank interest.
The same March 24 draft kept a carve-out for activity-based rewards tied to loyalty programs, promotions, subscriptions, transactions, payments and platform use, while directing the SEC, CFTC and Treasury to define permissible rewards and anti-evasion rules.
Why Banks Are Fighting the Language
$1.3 trillion is the ICBA’s estimate for the community-bank deposit reduction if stablecoin yield is permitted, alongside an estimated $850 billion decline in lending.
The ICBA estimate helps explain why banks have treated stablecoin yield as a market-structure issue, not a niche crypto carve-out. The same pressure is visible in FedNow cross-border proposal raises XRP payment questions and Bitcoin ETF Coinbase Custody Tops 80% of Assets, where payment rails, custody and bank access are also under scrutiny.
What Traders and Policy Watchers Should Track Next
The June 5, 2025 Congressional Record shows earlier Senate stablecoin language barring issuers or affiliates from paying holders any form of interest or yield in cash, tokens, rewards or other consideration, so the next Tillis draft will be judged on whether it narrows or preserves that approach.
The immediate watchpoint is whether the March 24 framework keeps the split between prohibited passive yield and permitted activity-based rewards. That distinction is the clearest compromise path now visible in the reporting.
FinTech Weekly reported on April 13, 2026 that Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott still had not announced a markup date, which makes the earlier release expectation look more like a dated process update than proof that the lobbying fight is over.
If centralized stablecoin rewards are narrowed, $6.56 billion in Ethena’s Ethereum TVL offers a scale marker for DeFi-native yield demand. That backdrop also makes Polygon’s $100M Stablecoin Push part of the same race to capture payment and rewards flows.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
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.
