Washington D.C. – A recent report from the White House Council of Economic Advisers (CEA) examining the economic implications of payment stablecoins has ignited a strong rebuttal from the American Bankers Association (ABA), a leading trade group representing banks of all sizes. The ABA contends that the CEA’s analysis, particularly its focus on the potential impact of banning yield on stablecoins, overlooks a more significant and potentially destabilizing risk: the large-scale migration of deposits from traditional community banks into yield-bearing stablecoin offerings.
The CEA’s report, released in early April 2026, primarily investigated whether prohibiting interest payments on stablecoins would lead to a modest increase in bank lending. The council estimated that such a ban could result in an additional $1.2 billion in lending across the U.S. economy. However, the ABA, in a strongly worded response authored by Chief Economist Sayee Srinivasan and VP Yikai Wang, argues that this perspective is myopic and fails to capture the full spectrum of potential market dynamics.
"The CEA paper risks creating a misleading sense of safety by avoiding the much more consequential scenario: yield-paying payment stablecoins scaling quickly," the ABA stated in its official response, dated April 13, 2026. The banking industry group asserts that the CEA’s focus on a ban’s marginal impact on lending misses the forest for the trees, failing to account for the broader economic consequences of an increasingly attractive stablecoin ecosystem.
A Shifting Financial Landscape: The Allure of Yield in Stablecoins
The core of the ABA’s argument rests on the premise that as stablecoins evolve to offer competitive yields, they become a more potent competitor to traditional bank deposits. This is particularly concerning for community banks, which rely heavily on stable, locally sourced deposits to fund their operations and provide crucial lending services to households and small businesses.
The ABA posits a scenario where, if yield-bearing stablecoins gain significant traction, a substantial portion of deposits could flow out of traditional banking institutions and into these digital assets. This outflow, the association warns, would not only make it more expensive for community banks to operate but would also severely curtail their capacity to lend within their local communities.
"Community banks rely on local deposits for lending to households and small businesses," the ABA’s response highlights. "If yield-paying stablecoins attract that money, banks cannot easily replace it." This reliance on local deposits is a cornerstone of community banking, enabling them to offer tailored financial products and support local economic development. A significant disruption to this deposit base could have cascading negative effects on Main Street businesses and individual borrowers.
The CEA’s Narrow Focus vs. the ABA’s Aggressive Scenario
The CEA’s report, while acknowledging the potential for deposit outflows, appears to have assessed the risk through a lens that downplays the magnitude of potential shifts. The estimate of a $1.2 billion increase in bank lending from a yield ban suggests a relatively contained impact. In contrast, the ABA presents a more aggressive, and in their view, more realistic, projection of market behavior.
According to the ABA, if stablecoins offering attractive returns achieve widespread adoption, the sheer scale of potential deposit migration could dwarf the CEA’s understated figures. This isn’t merely a theoretical concern; the ABA points to existing trends in financial innovation where higher yields invariably attract capital. The rapid growth of money market funds and other yield-seeking instruments over the past decades serves as a historical precedent for how capital responds to attractive returns.
The ABA’s economists specifically criticize the CEA for not adequately considering the "deposit outflows through banks if stablecoins offering returns become widely adopted." This indicates a belief that the CEA’s modeling may not fully capture the behavioral economics at play when consumers and businesses have readily available alternatives to traditional banking for earning returns on their cash holdings.
The Clarity Act and the Intensifying Debate
This clash between the CEA and the ABA is unfolding against the backdrop of ongoing legislative efforts in Washington to establish a regulatory framework for stablecoins. The White House has previously expressed support for limiting yields on stablecoins as part of the proposed Clarity Act, a piece of legislation aimed at providing clearer rules for the digital asset industry. The ABA’s response, issued on April 13, 2026, directly challenges this approach, suggesting that the proposed legislative direction is fundamentally misaligned with the true risks.
The ABA’s warning that the CEA’s focus on a prohibition “risks creating a misleading sense of safety” underscores a fundamental disagreement on the nature of the threat. The banks are not just concerned about a marginal increase in lending; they are worried about the potential for a systemic shift in financial intermediation, where a significant portion of liquidity moves outside the traditional banking system.
Community Banks on the Front Lines

The ABA’s analysis places particular emphasis on the vulnerability of community banks. Unlike large, diversified financial institutions that can absorb deposit shocks or access alternative funding sources more readily, community banks are often more dependent on stable, local deposit bases.
If yield-paying stablecoins siphon off these deposits, community banks could face a liquidity crunch. The association explains that they would then be forced to turn to more expensive funding sources, such as advances from the Federal Home Loan Bank System or capital markets. This increased cost of funding would inevitably be passed on to customers in the form of higher borrowing costs for loans, impacting the affordability of mortgages, business loans, and other essential credit products.
The ABA even quantifies the potential damage, estimating that in states like Iowa, a rapid scaling of stablecoins could lead to a drop in lending ranging from $4.4 billion to $8.7 billion. This projection illustrates the tangible impact on local economies, suggesting that the benefits of innovation in the stablecoin space could come at the direct expense of Main Street economic activity.
Consensus on Migration Risks, Divergence on Solutions
While the ABA and the CEA may differ on the severity and focus of the risks, there appears to be a broad consensus across the industry and academic circles regarding one crucial point: offering yield makes stablecoins significantly more attractive. This enhanced attractiveness incentivizes individuals and businesses to move funds out of traditional banks, unless regulatory measures are put in place to mitigate this incentive.
The ABA’s critique of the CEA’s analysis extends to the council’s apparent treatment of the banking system as a monolithic entity. The association argues that deposit shifts do not affect all banks equally. Typically, larger, more diversified institutions are better positioned to weather deposit outflows, and may even benefit from the consolidation of liquidity. In contrast, smaller community banks, already operating on thinner margins, are left more vulnerable, potentially leading to a concentration of financial power and a widening of credit availability disparities.
The "Narrow Banking" Concern and the Case for a Yield Ban
Adding another layer to the debate, the ABA raises the specter of "narrow banking" in relation to stablecoins. Narrow banking refers to a model where financial institutions hold reserves that do not directly support real-world lending. This concept has been a point of concern for policymakers in discussions around Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs), with fears that such a shift could weaken the overall credit flow within the economy.
The ABA suggests that yield-paying stablecoins, if they attract substantial deposits without a commensurate increase in real-economy lending, could effectively function as a form of narrow banking. This would mean that a significant pool of capital, while held in a seemingly stable digital asset, would not be contributing to the productive capacity of the economy through traditional credit channels.
Given these concerns, the ABA argues that banning yield on stablecoins is not an overly restrictive measure, but rather a pragmatic approach. Such a ban, they contend, would allow stablecoins to develop as efficient payment tools without directly competing with the fundamental role of bank deposits in the financial system. This would preserve the ability of banks to act as intermediaries, channeling savings into productive investments and lending.
The Road Ahead: Legislative Hurdles and Industry Divisions
As Congress continues to deliberate on the future of stablecoin regulation, particularly under the umbrella of the Clarity Act, the ABA’s robust pushback introduces a significant new dynamic. The banking industry’s concerns about deposit outflows and their potential impact on community banks will likely necessitate further scrutiny and debate.
The scheduled roundtable discussions on April 16, 2026, are expected to be a pivotal moment in this ongoing dialogue. The ABA’s response has undoubtedly amplified the concerns of traditional financial institutions and will likely lead to demands for more comprehensive hearings, potential amendments to proposed legislation, and protracted negotiations.
While the ABA’s intervention may not outright block the progress of the Clarity Act, it could certainly influence its final form and potentially alter the timeline for its enactment. The banking sector’s unified front in highlighting these systemic risks underscores the deep divisions that persist between the established financial industry and the burgeoning digital asset ecosystem. Policymakers are now tasked with navigating these competing interests to craft regulations that foster innovation while safeguarding financial stability and the accessibility of credit for all segments of the economy.
The implications of this debate extend far beyond the immediate legislative battle. It touches upon the very nature of financial intermediation in the digital age, questioning how deposits will be sourced and deployed, and what role traditional banks will play in a financial landscape increasingly populated by digital assets. The outcome of this legislative process will have a lasting impact on the structure of the U.S. financial system and its ability to support economic growth.
