#Clarity法案最新草案 Wall Street's Guillotine: When the "Yield Frenzy" of Dollar Stablecoins Gets Zeroed Out by Politicians with One Click!
On Wall Street on March 24, 2026, the air reeks of blood. Just yesterday, those Web3 elites celebrating crypto compliance from Manhattan's penthouse apartments with wine glasses in hand were kicked off the balcony by a draft proposal flying in from Washington.
Circle (ticker: CRCL), the dollar stablecoin issuer championing "absolute compliance," experienced an epic crash after the US stock market opening, with its stock price plummeting 19% like a kite with a severed string, not only piercing through the 21-day moving average support level but also creating the most devastating single-day decline in the company's history.
Before this avalanche, no one was spared. As Circle's closest ally and primary distribution channel, crypto's first public stock Cb (ticker: COIN) followed suit with a 9% dive, instantly breaking through the 50-day lifeline. The culprit behind all this was neither a hacker attack nor code vulnerability, but a draft revision of legislation called the "Digital Asset Market Clarity Act."
This text hammered out by Senators Thom Tillis and Angela Alsobrooks in a closed-door meeting used just one casually worded sentence to precisely sever the main artery of the entire centralized stablecoin industry: a comprehensive ban on any "passive yield" activities for stablecoin holders, and the elimination of all revenue structures "economically equivalent to interest." In this magical capital market, you thought you were leading a decentralization revolution, but politicians saw it clearly—you were just conducting unlicensed deposit-taking traditional banking business under the blockchain shell. When the regulatory sickle truly swings down, those financial arbitrage games wrapped in geeky jargon instantly reveal their true form.
**Unplugging the "Tollgate" Money-Printing Machine**
To understand the underlying logic of this crash, you first need to strip away the shiny "tech company" veneer from stablecoin issuers and see how they actually make money. This isn't some unfathomable cyberpunk black technology—it's an extremely simple and crude lying-flat money-making business.
Take Circle as an example: USDC's current market cap stands at $78.6 billion. What does this mean? It means $78.6 billion in real money has been handed over to Circle for free. In the traditional financial world, when you deposit money in a bank, the bank grudgingly pays you interest. But in this crypto model called the "tollgate model," Circle uses these tens of billions to purchase absolutely safe short-term US Treasury bonds, earning risk-free substantial interest income, while early USDC holders don't get a single penny.
To make this flywheel spin faster and encourage more people to exchange their money for USDC, Circle and Cb built what could be called a genius "interest distribution pipeline." Although the previously passed GENIUS Act explicitly prohibited stablecoin issuers from directly paying users interest, capital is always smarter than law.
Circle cut a large chunk of the massive returns generated by Treasury reserves and distributed them to Cb, which then returned these funds to USDC holders through various "incentive programs" on its platform. In analysts' eyes, USDC's yield business contributed nearly 20% of Cb's total revenue. This constituted a perfect closed loop: users obtained deposit-like returns, platforms obtained massive liquidity, and issuers expanded market share.
But the "Clarity Act" draft was like a short-tempered OCD patient directly kicking over this carefully designed profit-distribution table. The draft text clearly states that not only can direct interest payments not happen, but any "channel modes economically equivalent to interest" must be completely eliminated. It's like you set up a tollbooth to collect tolls; before, police wouldn't let you directly collect cash, so you had drivers scan codes to buy your overpriced bottled water; now police tell you that as long as you make drivers pay money, no matter what form it takes, it's all robbery.
Amir Hajian, a digital asset researcher at Keyrock, hit the nail on the head: this directly drains the most core driving force behind stablecoin adoption. When the plug is ripped from this money-printing machine by politicians, Circle's stock price, which had been skyrocketing 170% since February, naturally can only plummet toward value correction in the most devastating manner.
**Old Money's Fear and the Community Banks' Defense War**
You might ask: why did Washington politicians suddenly crack down so hard on stablecoin yield mechanisms? Are they really trying to protect those retail investors who went all-out in crypto casinos?
Don't be naive. In this world, the only force that can make politicians achieve cross-party consensus so efficiently is the extreme fear of old money from traditional finance. The essence of this legislation isn't some guidance on regulating technological innovation—it's a naked traditional bank deposit defense war. Over the past two years, traditional banking has had a rough time, especially those community banks scattered across American states that rely on absorbing local residents' deposits to lend to small and medium enterprises. When the Federal Reserve maintains high-interest environments, traditional banks pinch pennies on deposit interest to control funding costs. Meanwhile, USDC in crypto exchanges can easily provide extremely attractive "demand deposit rewards" through the transmission of reserve gains.
The American Bankers Association's lobbying group on Capitol Hill is famous for its iron fist. In their view, if stablecoins are allowed to continue paying interest indirectly, this is no longer self-entertaining in crypto circles but flagrant siphoning of deposits from the traditional banking system. Capital is extremely intelligent; once the public realizes they only need to download a Cb app to get passive returns far exceeding those from corner community banks, a massive deposit exodus becomes inevitable. This would be devastating to traditional finance's credit capacity and survival foundation. Therefore, the compromise result of this draft is extremely precise and ruthless.
Legislators made a clear cut: allow stablecoin rewards based on "transaction activity," but absolutely prohibit "balance-based" passive yield. In other words, like credit card points, you can incentivize users to consume with stablecoins, make transfers, and generate flows, but you absolutely cannot let users earn money just by keeping it in their accounts. Politicians used legal boundaries to forcibly push stablecoins back to their original positioning—a pure payment tool, not a high-yield deposit account dressed up in digital clothing.
This is not only a dimensional reduction strike against Circle's core business model but also a successful sniper attack by Wall Street's old-guard capital against Silicon Valley's financial upstarts.
**Tether's Black Humor: The Offshore Pirate's "Reverse Compliance" Backstab**
If Circle's stock collapse was tragedy, then what happened in the broader crypto market that same day turned this play into absurd black comedy. Just as Circle, which obediently listened and underwent comprehensive Deloitte audits annually, desperately courted American regulators, it got slammed to the ground by its own government's legislation. Meanwhile, its biggest enemy, the offshore giant Tether (USDT) that long lurked in regulatory gray areas, dropped a bombshell the same day. With a market cap of $184 billion and firmly holding the stablecoin throne, USDT announced it had hired one of the global "Big Four" accounting firms to conduct the first comprehensive and formal audit of its reserves. This news delivered the ultimate psychological blow to Circle.
Since its birth in 2014, Tether had been questioned by countless short-sellers and regulators about its reserve transparency, previously only willing to provide vague quarterly "attestations" without proper audit reports. Through such wild growth, USDT captured the vast majority of global liquidity. Now the plot reversed. When Circle faced the domestic US legal machinery precisely controlling its income model due to being too compliant, Tether, having already earned massive profits operating as an outlaw, turned around and used that money to buy top-tier auditor credibility backing.
This is an extremely arrogant dimensional reduction strike: the compliance barriers Circle painstakingly built, I Tether can buy by throwing money; and the domestic regulatory grinder you now face, I as an offshore issuer don't need to bother with at all. In Wall Street institutions' eyes, this contrast is extremely fatal. If Tether truly passes Big Four's comprehensive audit and washes away its long-standing opacity label, its risk rating in institutional investors' eyes will plummet significantly. On one side is USDC restricted by the "Clarity Act," facing legal prosecution even for paying users a little interest; on the other is USDT about to receive top-tier endorsement and completely free from American strict domestic legislation, capital's choice needs no second thought.
Tether's audit announcement at this critical moment was absolutely a carefully calculated public relations war, not only stabbing Circle in the back but also flipping the bird at Washington's entire regulatory system with golden shine.
**The Cruel Reality of "Yield Assets" Degrading into "Fun Tokens"**
The panic sparked by the draft is spreading, and its profound restructuring of the entire crypto finance landscape is just beginning. Stablecoins stripped of passive yield capacity face cruel genetic downgrade: they will be forcibly downgraded from "yield-bearing assets" with compounding power to pure media without time value—bluntly put, just cyber fun tokens useful only for transaction settlement. This degradation deals structural damage to the DeFi ecosystem. Previously, substantial conservative capital was willing to remain on-chain because underlying stablecoins themselves came with risk-free yields, providing a solid foundation for the entire DeFi Lego tower. Once the "Clarity Act" completely blocks centralized issuers' profit transmission channels, users accustomed to lying-flat earning will face two choices: either bear extremely high smart contract risks and cascade liquidation risks, throwing stablecoins into those decentralized lending protocols that could collapse anytime for marginal yields; or simply withdraw funds back to the traditional banking system. Either outcome will cause irreversible liquidity contraction in crypto markets.
But capital never sits idle. As Bitwise's research director Ryan Rasmussen predicted, this market will definitely create new workaround ways to monetize. Since you can't directly call it "interest" and can't be "economically equivalent to interest" in structure, platforms will definitely push financial engineers to become literary masters and game designers. We can foresee that future crypto markets will see extremely complex "loyalty programs," "activity mining," or "ecosystem contribution rewards." Users might not earn just for having money in accounts anymore but must complete meaningless daily clicks, transfers, or interactions on platforms to receive their share of dividends. This is undoubtedly enormous regression and tragedy.
To cope with rigid regulatory law, the entire industry must complexify, twist, and even gamify what was originally efficient and transparent revenue distribution mechanisms. Clear Street analysts tried to calm markets, believing current selloff reflects "shoot first, ask questions later" overreaction, after all Circle still holds 30% of this market destined to expand tenfold. But this cannot hide a cold fact: before absolute regulatory power, crypto's financial innovation remains fragile as glass. The moment politicians compromised around oak tables on Capitol Hill, stablecoins' golden age of lying-flat earning was permanently nailed shut in history's coffin.
On Wall Street on March 24, 2026, the air reeks of blood. Just yesterday, those Web3 elites celebrating crypto compliance from Manhattan's penthouse apartments with wine glasses in hand were kicked off the balcony by a draft proposal flying in from Washington.
Circle (ticker: CRCL), the dollar stablecoin issuer championing "absolute compliance," experienced an epic crash after the US stock market opening, with its stock price plummeting 19% like a kite with a severed string, not only piercing through the 21-day moving average support level but also creating the most devastating single-day decline in the company's history.
Before this avalanche, no one was spared. As Circle's closest ally and primary distribution channel, crypto's first public stock Cb (ticker: COIN) followed suit with a 9% dive, instantly breaking through the 50-day lifeline. The culprit behind all this was neither a hacker attack nor code vulnerability, but a draft revision of legislation called the "Digital Asset Market Clarity Act."
This text hammered out by Senators Thom Tillis and Angela Alsobrooks in a closed-door meeting used just one casually worded sentence to precisely sever the main artery of the entire centralized stablecoin industry: a comprehensive ban on any "passive yield" activities for stablecoin holders, and the elimination of all revenue structures "economically equivalent to interest." In this magical capital market, you thought you were leading a decentralization revolution, but politicians saw it clearly—you were just conducting unlicensed deposit-taking traditional banking business under the blockchain shell. When the regulatory sickle truly swings down, those financial arbitrage games wrapped in geeky jargon instantly reveal their true form.
**Unplugging the "Tollgate" Money-Printing Machine**
To understand the underlying logic of this crash, you first need to strip away the shiny "tech company" veneer from stablecoin issuers and see how they actually make money. This isn't some unfathomable cyberpunk black technology—it's an extremely simple and crude lying-flat money-making business.
Take Circle as an example: USDC's current market cap stands at $78.6 billion. What does this mean? It means $78.6 billion in real money has been handed over to Circle for free. In the traditional financial world, when you deposit money in a bank, the bank grudgingly pays you interest. But in this crypto model called the "tollgate model," Circle uses these tens of billions to purchase absolutely safe short-term US Treasury bonds, earning risk-free substantial interest income, while early USDC holders don't get a single penny.
To make this flywheel spin faster and encourage more people to exchange their money for USDC, Circle and Cb built what could be called a genius "interest distribution pipeline." Although the previously passed GENIUS Act explicitly prohibited stablecoin issuers from directly paying users interest, capital is always smarter than law.
Circle cut a large chunk of the massive returns generated by Treasury reserves and distributed them to Cb, which then returned these funds to USDC holders through various "incentive programs" on its platform. In analysts' eyes, USDC's yield business contributed nearly 20% of Cb's total revenue. This constituted a perfect closed loop: users obtained deposit-like returns, platforms obtained massive liquidity, and issuers expanded market share.
But the "Clarity Act" draft was like a short-tempered OCD patient directly kicking over this carefully designed profit-distribution table. The draft text clearly states that not only can direct interest payments not happen, but any "channel modes economically equivalent to interest" must be completely eliminated. It's like you set up a tollbooth to collect tolls; before, police wouldn't let you directly collect cash, so you had drivers scan codes to buy your overpriced bottled water; now police tell you that as long as you make drivers pay money, no matter what form it takes, it's all robbery.
Amir Hajian, a digital asset researcher at Keyrock, hit the nail on the head: this directly drains the most core driving force behind stablecoin adoption. When the plug is ripped from this money-printing machine by politicians, Circle's stock price, which had been skyrocketing 170% since February, naturally can only plummet toward value correction in the most devastating manner.
**Old Money's Fear and the Community Banks' Defense War**
You might ask: why did Washington politicians suddenly crack down so hard on stablecoin yield mechanisms? Are they really trying to protect those retail investors who went all-out in crypto casinos?
Don't be naive. In this world, the only force that can make politicians achieve cross-party consensus so efficiently is the extreme fear of old money from traditional finance. The essence of this legislation isn't some guidance on regulating technological innovation—it's a naked traditional bank deposit defense war. Over the past two years, traditional banking has had a rough time, especially those community banks scattered across American states that rely on absorbing local residents' deposits to lend to small and medium enterprises. When the Federal Reserve maintains high-interest environments, traditional banks pinch pennies on deposit interest to control funding costs. Meanwhile, USDC in crypto exchanges can easily provide extremely attractive "demand deposit rewards" through the transmission of reserve gains.
The American Bankers Association's lobbying group on Capitol Hill is famous for its iron fist. In their view, if stablecoins are allowed to continue paying interest indirectly, this is no longer self-entertaining in crypto circles but flagrant siphoning of deposits from the traditional banking system. Capital is extremely intelligent; once the public realizes they only need to download a Cb app to get passive returns far exceeding those from corner community banks, a massive deposit exodus becomes inevitable. This would be devastating to traditional finance's credit capacity and survival foundation. Therefore, the compromise result of this draft is extremely precise and ruthless.
Legislators made a clear cut: allow stablecoin rewards based on "transaction activity," but absolutely prohibit "balance-based" passive yield. In other words, like credit card points, you can incentivize users to consume with stablecoins, make transfers, and generate flows, but you absolutely cannot let users earn money just by keeping it in their accounts. Politicians used legal boundaries to forcibly push stablecoins back to their original positioning—a pure payment tool, not a high-yield deposit account dressed up in digital clothing.
This is not only a dimensional reduction strike against Circle's core business model but also a successful sniper attack by Wall Street's old-guard capital against Silicon Valley's financial upstarts.
**Tether's Black Humor: The Offshore Pirate's "Reverse Compliance" Backstab**
If Circle's stock collapse was tragedy, then what happened in the broader crypto market that same day turned this play into absurd black comedy. Just as Circle, which obediently listened and underwent comprehensive Deloitte audits annually, desperately courted American regulators, it got slammed to the ground by its own government's legislation. Meanwhile, its biggest enemy, the offshore giant Tether (USDT) that long lurked in regulatory gray areas, dropped a bombshell the same day. With a market cap of $184 billion and firmly holding the stablecoin throne, USDT announced it had hired one of the global "Big Four" accounting firms to conduct the first comprehensive and formal audit of its reserves. This news delivered the ultimate psychological blow to Circle.
Since its birth in 2014, Tether had been questioned by countless short-sellers and regulators about its reserve transparency, previously only willing to provide vague quarterly "attestations" without proper audit reports. Through such wild growth, USDT captured the vast majority of global liquidity. Now the plot reversed. When Circle faced the domestic US legal machinery precisely controlling its income model due to being too compliant, Tether, having already earned massive profits operating as an outlaw, turned around and used that money to buy top-tier auditor credibility backing.
This is an extremely arrogant dimensional reduction strike: the compliance barriers Circle painstakingly built, I Tether can buy by throwing money; and the domestic regulatory grinder you now face, I as an offshore issuer don't need to bother with at all. In Wall Street institutions' eyes, this contrast is extremely fatal. If Tether truly passes Big Four's comprehensive audit and washes away its long-standing opacity label, its risk rating in institutional investors' eyes will plummet significantly. On one side is USDC restricted by the "Clarity Act," facing legal prosecution even for paying users a little interest; on the other is USDT about to receive top-tier endorsement and completely free from American strict domestic legislation, capital's choice needs no second thought.
Tether's audit announcement at this critical moment was absolutely a carefully calculated public relations war, not only stabbing Circle in the back but also flipping the bird at Washington's entire regulatory system with golden shine.
**The Cruel Reality of "Yield Assets" Degrading into "Fun Tokens"**
The panic sparked by the draft is spreading, and its profound restructuring of the entire crypto finance landscape is just beginning. Stablecoins stripped of passive yield capacity face cruel genetic downgrade: they will be forcibly downgraded from "yield-bearing assets" with compounding power to pure media without time value—bluntly put, just cyber fun tokens useful only for transaction settlement. This degradation deals structural damage to the DeFi ecosystem. Previously, substantial conservative capital was willing to remain on-chain because underlying stablecoins themselves came with risk-free yields, providing a solid foundation for the entire DeFi Lego tower. Once the "Clarity Act" completely blocks centralized issuers' profit transmission channels, users accustomed to lying-flat earning will face two choices: either bear extremely high smart contract risks and cascade liquidation risks, throwing stablecoins into those decentralized lending protocols that could collapse anytime for marginal yields; or simply withdraw funds back to the traditional banking system. Either outcome will cause irreversible liquidity contraction in crypto markets.
But capital never sits idle. As Bitwise's research director Ryan Rasmussen predicted, this market will definitely create new workaround ways to monetize. Since you can't directly call it "interest" and can't be "economically equivalent to interest" in structure, platforms will definitely push financial engineers to become literary masters and game designers. We can foresee that future crypto markets will see extremely complex "loyalty programs," "activity mining," or "ecosystem contribution rewards." Users might not earn just for having money in accounts anymore but must complete meaningless daily clicks, transfers, or interactions on platforms to receive their share of dividends. This is undoubtedly enormous regression and tragedy.
To cope with rigid regulatory law, the entire industry must complexify, twist, and even gamify what was originally efficient and transparent revenue distribution mechanisms. Clear Street analysts tried to calm markets, believing current selloff reflects "shoot first, ask questions later" overreaction, after all Circle still holds 30% of this market destined to expand tenfold. But this cannot hide a cold fact: before absolute regulatory power, crypto's financial innovation remains fragile as glass. The moment politicians compromised around oak tables on Capitol Hill, stablecoins' golden age of lying-flat earning was permanently nailed shut in history's coffin.
































