10/16/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 10/16/2025 09:44
"The most effective way to prevent stablecoins from undermining credit availability is to close the loophole that allows intermediaries to pay yield."
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Former Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) enforcement economist Andrew Nigrinis, Ph.D., today penned a new op-ed in Open Banker highlighting new research that examines how a deposit flight to interest-bearing stablecoin issuers could impact banks' ability to meet the lending needs of the millions of consumers, small businesses, and communities they serve.
Dr. Nigrinis explains how he applies pre-existing research on the impact of stablecoins - should they begin offering yield through digital wallets or exchanges - on the deposits and lending landscape:
"Relying on pre-existing literature, if stablecoin intermediaries are allowed to offer yield at the Federal funds rate, about $1.5 trillion in lending capacity - about one-fifth of all currently outstanding consumer, small-business, and farm credit nationwide - would be at risk.
"Wallets and exchanges now routinely offer "yield," "cash-back," or "rewards" that mirror the Federal funds rate [...] if this back door allowing yield-bearing stablecoins at other intermediaries isn't closed, it could siphon trillions of dollars from deposits."
Two scenarios are modeled in Dr. Nigrinis' research:
A. No-Yield Scenario
B. Yield Scenario (Loophole Persists)
Dr. Nigrinis ultimately concludes that "the most effective way to prevent stablecoins from undermining credit availability is to close the loophole that allows intermediaries to pay yield."
Stablecoins could redefine the U.S. financial system, but they must not undermine credit creation-the core of U.S. economic resilience. Regulating stablecoin yields appropriately results in protecting the distinction between payments and deposits, which is essential to safeguarding bank lending, jobs, and economic growth.
To read the full op-ed, click HERE.