JPMorgan’s CFO warns stablecoins could become a “regulatory arbitrage” if rules don’t catch up JPMorgan Chase CFO Jeremy Barnum warned on the bank’s Q1 earnings call that stablecoins risk becoming vehicles for regulatory arbitrage if lawmakers fail to align new rules with traditional banking standards. Barnum framed the issue less as a technology breakthrough and more as a question of oversight: if stablecoin products replicate the economics of bank deposits without the same safeguards, firms could effectively “run a bank” outside core banking rules. “If the same product isn’t regulated the same way, you open the door to arbitrage,” Barnum said, calling out structures that offer rewards resembling yield. That concern is central as Washington debates fresh frameworks for digital assets, including the proposed Clarity Act, which seeks to clarify how responsibilities are divided between regulators such as the SEC and the CFTC. Why yield-bearing stablecoins are the flashpoint A key flashpoint is whether stablecoin issuers should be allowed to pass interest earned on reserve assets to coin holders. Crypto firms including Coinbase have argued that passing through yield would make dollar-pegged coins more useful as savings instruments. Banks have pushed back, saying such yield-bearing stablecoins begin to resemble deposits—without banks’ capital, liquidity and consumer protections—creating an uneven playing field that could attract retail and institutional funds to less-regulated providers. Barnum said JPMorgan supports clearer rules, but emphasized that consistency matters more than speed: without uniform regulation, he warned, new entrants could gain unfair advantages by operating outside existing boundaries. JPMorgan isn’t braced for payments disruption Barnum downplayed talk that stablecoins will upend JPMorgan’s payments business. The bank already operates a large wholesale payments network that processes transactions cheaply and quickly, he said, leaving limited room for margin-driven disruption. Instead, JPMorgan is folding similar features into its own infrastructure. Through its blockchain arm, Kinexys, the bank has developed tools such as JPM Coin and tokenized deposits that let institutional clients move money 24/7 and automate transactions. Barnum framed these efforts as modernization rather than displacement: programmable payments and other capabilities commonly associated with stablecoins are being built into existing banking rails, not simply replaced by new tokens. On the consumer side, he noted, stablecoins still face the same compliance hurdles banks do, including identity verification. Q1 results: solid quarter JPMorgan reported stronger-than-expected first-quarter results. Net income rose 13% year over year to $16.49 billion, while revenue climbed 10% to $50.54 billion. The bank also set aside less for potential loan losses than analysts expected, a sign of relatively stable credit conditions among borrowers. What it means for crypto Barnum’s remarks underscore a broader policy tension: stablecoins can offer useful payment primitives and programmability, but regulators and incumbent banks insist that those benefits shouldn’t come at the cost of bypassing long-standing consumer and prudential safeguards. As Congress and regulators work on clearer rules—whether via the Clarity Act or other legislation—the fate of yield-bearing stablecoins and the competitive dynamics between banks and crypto firms will remain a central issue for the industry. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news