Svmuu News JPMorgan CFO Jeremy Barnum stated during an earnings call that if regulatory rules are not aligned with traditional bank deposits, stablecoins could evolve into tools for "regulatory arbitrage." He pointed out that some stablecoin models already exhibit deposit-like characteristics, such as offering incentives similar to yields, yet they are not subject to bank regulatory requirements like capital, liquidity, and consumer protection, potentially creating an unfair competitive environment. "If the same product is not regulated equally, it opens up an arbitrage opportunity," Barnum said.
Currently, at the U.S. legislative level, efforts are underway to advance crypto regulatory frameworks, including the Clarity Act, to clarify the regulatory division of labor between the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, and to standardize the development of the stablecoin market.
Furthermore, whether to allow stablecoins to distribute reserve earnings to users has become a contentious issue. Crypto companies, including Coinbase, support "interest-bearing stablecoins," while banks argue that this move would bring them closer to deposit products, yet they lack corresponding regulatory constraints.
JPMorgan expressed support for regulatory clarity but emphasized that "regulatory consistency" takes precedence over speed. Meanwhile, the bank is advancing product deployments, including JPM Coin and tokenized deposits, through its blockchain division Kinexys, to modernize the payment system. (CoinDesk)