

Congress is ready to act. Thx @cherylcasone and @morningsmaria.
â Paul Grewal (@iampaulgrewal) April 1, 2026 The Coinbase executive directly addressed the banking industry's core concern. "I can understand the theoretical argument that somehow stablecoins pose a risk to deposit flight from banks, especially community banks," Grewal said. "But if that were in fact the reality, we'd see evidence of that. In fact, there has been no evidence of deposit flight whatsoever." The legislative timeline could move quickly, with Grewal projecting movement towards a markup hearing in the Senate Banking Committee, âhopefully as soon as in the next few weeks, and ultimately a floor vote." He added that he was âvery confident weâre going to see progressâ on the stablecoin yield agreement within the next 48 hours. In a follow-up tweet, Grewal said that Congress is "ready to act." The controversy over stablecoin yield limits has proved divisive enough that the Senate Banking Committee cancelled a planned session on the bill in mid-January. Senators Thom Tillis (R-NC) and Angela Alsobrooks (D-MD) subsequently negotiated compromise draft text late March, enabling an âagreement in principleâ with the White House. The legislative outcome carries significant financial implications for Coinbase, whose stock has fallen 50% over the past six months amid regulatory uncertainty. Prediction markets show growing confidence in the bill's prospects, with Polymarket traders giving the Clarity Act a 65% chance of being signed into law by President Trump this year, up from lows of 48% yesterday. The legislation would provide regulatory clarity that could allow U.S. crypto exchanges to compete with offshore platforms offering stablecoin yield products, a key revenue driver that companies like Coinbase have been unable to fully deploy domestically to date. The back-and-forth over the Clarity Act's stablecoin yield provisions has sparked turmoil in the markets, with Circle's stock plunging 20% when investors learned of potential restrictions, while as crypto bill fears rattled traders. The legislation faces a , otherwise "digital asset legislation will not pass for the foreseeable future," according to Senator Bernie Moreno (R-OH).
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