Mon, 11 Maregulation

La Maison Blanche révèle que les banques américaines ont « refusé » d’assister aux réunions visant à résoudre le problème des récompenses stables dans le cadre de la loi CLARITY

Burns Brief

Un haut responsable de la Maison Blanche a accusé les principaux dirigeants du secteur bancaire d'avoir refusé de se joindre aux négociations antérieures sur les récompenses stables, aggravant un différend qui est devenu l'un des derniers points de pression... La nouvelle a secoué les acteurs du marché, les baissiers cherchant à faire baisser les prix tandis que les haussiers tentent de défendre les niveaux de support clés. Surveillez la réaction de $EOS : un mouvement décisif au-dessus ou en dessous des niveaux clés confirmera la prochaine tendance.

A senior White House official has accused major banking trade leaders of refusing to join earlier talks on stablecoin rewards, escalating a dispute that has become one of the final pressure points ahead of the Senate Banking Committee taking up the CLARITY Act this week. In a May 11 post on the social media platform X, Patrick Witt, executive director of the White House Presidential Advisory Committee on Digital Assets, said he had asked American Bankers Association President Rob Nichols and other bank trade CEOs to attend the February meetings aimed at resolving the question of stablecoin rewards and yield . He stated : “I specifically requested the attendance of Mr. Nichols and other bank trade CEOs at the meetings we hosted back in February to resolve the stablecoin rewards/yield issue. They refused. I guess the White House was beneath them?” The criticism injected the White House more directly into a fight that has divided banks, crypto companies, and lawmakers ahead of a scheduled May 14 markup of the CLARITY Act . The bill is designed to create a broader market structure framework for digital assets, but the treatment of stablecoin rewards has become a flashpoint over competition for deposits, consumer yield, and the future shape of dollar-based payments. Witt’s comments also reframed the timing of the banking industry’s objections. Rather than a new technical concern emerging before a committee vote, the White House official cast the dispute as an unresolved issue that banking leaders had an opportunity to address months earlier. Banks reopen stablecoin rewards fight before markup Over the weekend, the American Bankers Association (ABA) urged bank executives and employees to press senators for tighter restrictions in the CLARITY Act before the committee vote, warning that the current bill could still allow crypto firms to offer reward structures that resemble interest on deposit-like products. Nichols told bankers that lawmakers needed to hear from the indust

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