JP Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon says stablecoin issuers paying interest should be regulated as banks
Dimon argued stablecoin issuers paying interest should meet bank standards as talks continue in Washington about the CLARITY Act.
By Helene Braun|Edited by Nikhilesh De Mar 3, 2026, 9:09 p.m.
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What to know:
- JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said Tuesday that stablecoin issuers that pay interest on customer balances should be regulated like banks, including meeting capital, liquidity and deposit insurance requirements.
- Dimon drew a distinction between transaction-based rewards and interest on stored balances, arguing that firms operating like deposit-taking institutions must face equivalent oversight for fairness and safety.
- The clash with Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong comes as Washington debates new stablecoin rules, with lawmakers and the White House weighing whether issuers should be allowed to offer yield on customer holdings.
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said banks want stablecoin issuers that pay interest on customer balances to face the same rules as traditional lenders, sharpening an ongoing debate over U.S. crypto legislation.
In an interview with CNBC on Tuesday, Dimon addressed reported tensions with Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong, who pulled support for the proposed CLARITY Act just one day before the Senate Banking Committee was scheduled to vote on it. Dimon argued that there needs to be a line between rewards paid on transactions and interest paid on stored balances.
“Rewards are the same as interest,” Dimon said. “If you are going to be holding balances and paying interest, that’s the bank. You should be regulated by a bank.”
Banks would accept a compromise in which crypto platforms offer rewards tied to transactions, he said. But firms that function like deposit-taking institutions should meet the same standards as banks, including capital and liquidity rules, anti-money laundering controls and federal deposit insurance requirements.
Dimon framed the issue as one of fairness and safety.
“Level playing field by product,” he said, arguing that companies offering similar financial services should operate under similar oversight. Without that parity, he warned, risks could build outside the regulated system. Armstrong, on the other hand, has said he believes that banks should be forced to compete instead.
Dimon, however, stressed that JPMorgan does support competition and uses blockchain in its own operations. The bank has developed a deposit token and processes payments and data transfers on distributed ledger systems. “We’re in favor of competition,” he said. “But it’s got to be fair and balanced.”
He also pointed to the broader compliance burden banks carry, from anti-money laundering checks to community lending obligations. Those requirements, he said, are designed to protect the financial system.
“For the safety of the system, not just the fairness of competition,” Dimon said.
The debate over stablecoin oversight has become a central issue in Washington as lawmakers weigh how to regulate digital assets without pushing activity into less transparent corners of the market. Lawmakers are reviewing new draft language circulated by the White House, though the banking and crypto industries have yet to reach agreement on whether stablecoin issuers should be allowed to offer yield on customer balances.
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International finance watchdog warns stablecoins are increasingly used in sanctions evasion and money laundering
By Olivier Acuna|Edited by Nikhilesh De4 hours ago
In its latest report, the global standard setter FATF said stablecoins now account for the bulk of illicit crypto activity and pose growing risks through peer-to-peer transfers.
What to know:
- The Financial Action Task Force warned that stablecoins are now the most widely used virtual asset in illicit transactions, including by actors in Iran and North Korea, and called for stricter oversight of issuers.
- Recent analyses by FATF, Chainalysis and TRM Labs found that stablecoins accounted for the vast majority of illicit crypto transaction volume in 2024 and 2025, with tens of billions of dollars tied to fraud, scams and sanctions evasion.
- FATF urged countries to impose anti-money laundering rules on stablecoin issuers, address risks from peer-to-peer transfers via unhosted wallets, and consider tools such as wallet freezing and restrictions on certain smart-contract functions as the market surpasses $300 billion.
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