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Circle jumps 16% on Clarity Act compromise that preserves stablecoin rewards

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Why This Matters

The recent compromise on the CLARITY Act has positively impacted the crypto industry by allowing stablecoin rewards tied to activity, which benefits companies like Circle and Coinbase. This development signals a shift towards integrating crypto more deeply into traditional financial infrastructure while reducing regulatory uncertainty. It also highlights a potential challenge for smaller platforms relying on high-yield stablecoin products.

Key Takeaways

Circle Internet Group Initial Public Offering at the New York Stock Exchange in New York City, U.S., June 5, 2025.

Shares of Circle surged after lawmakers over the weekend struck a compromise on the market structure bill known as the CLARITY Act, preserving stablecoin reward programs under certain conditions.

On Friday, key language in the proposed crypto legislation was updated to restrict crypto companies from paying savings account-like interest or yield to users on passive stablecoin deposits – leaving that function to traditional banks. However, the bill does allow rewards as usage-driven incentives that could be tied to activity like trading, transactions or staking, as expected.

The stablecoin issuer Circle jumped 16%, while Coinbase , the main distributor of Circle's USDC stablecoin, gained more than 7%. BitGo and Galaxy Digital rose 12% and 5%, respectively.

Bitcoin was little changed at about $79,000, after the flagship cryptocurrency topped $80,000 over the weekend for the first time since January.

Earning yield, usually in the form of rewards, on stablecoins like USDC and others has been a key incentive for users to hold the coins – similar to the interest earned on cash sitting in a bank account. The revised language is a relative win for Circle and Coinbase. However, it could pressure smaller crypto platforms that have leaned heavily on high-yield deposit products to attract users.

The development also aligns with a wider industry shift away from return-seeking products and services and toward crypto's use in upgrading financial infrastructure.

Most banks have yet to weigh in on the legislation, but Bank of America called it a net win for the sector.

"Across bank sub‑sectors, the CLARITY Act's resolution of the stablecoin yield debate is a net positive," Bank of America analyst Ebrahim H. Poonawala said in a note Monday. "It should alleviate concerns tied to deposit flight, reduce regulatory uncertainty, and allow banks to engage with digital‑asset infrastructure on more controlled terms."

The crypto industry has so far had a favorable response to the development.

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