JPMorgan is urging lawmakers not to sacrifice financial safeguards in the race to regulate crypto.
- JPM executives argued that crypto regulation should pair innovation with durable safeguards, cautioning that regulatory loopholes could shift activity into less-supervised parts of the financial system.
- The comments come as Senate Republicans push to bring the CLARITY Act to the floor in July, with support from both Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott and White House crypto adviser Patrick Witt.
- The stance aligns with CEO Jamie Dimon's longstanding concerns that stablecoins compete with banks without facing the same regulatory requirements.
As Congress moves closer to establishing a regulatory framework for digital assets, JPMorgan executives are urging lawmakers not to confuse regulatory clarity with financial stability. In a policy post published Monday, senior executives at the bank warned that yield-bearing stablecoins offering bank-like returns without comparable capital, liquidity and consumer-protection requirements could create "shadow banking" risks, adding a new voice to the debate ahead of the Senate's expected consideration of the CLARITY Act in July.

The post, written by Umar Farooq, the Global Co-Head of J.P. Morgan Payments, and Peter Muriungi, the CEO of Digital Assets and Blockchain Solutions, explained that regulatory clarity "matters only if paired with durable safeguards," and warned that if policy codified clarity while leaving fundamental risks unresolved, it "will invite instability, not leadership."
Warning On Yield-Bearing Stablecoins
The executives reserved their sharpest warning for stablecoins. Products that offer yield-like rewards or cashback for holding balances, without bank-level capital, liquidity, and consumer-protection standards, could amount to "shadow banking by another name" and raise the risk of runs, they wrote.
JPMorgan positioned itself as evidence that responsible innovation could work within existing guardrails, citing its Kinexys blockchain unit and the JPM Coin deposit token. Responsible innovation "is already possible within existing guardrails, and it can scale further with the right framework in place," the executives explained.
CLARITY Act: Lawmakers Push For A July Vote
The post landed as the Senate raced to advance the Digital Asset Market Clarity (CLARITY) Act, with Republican leaders pressing for a vote next month.

Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott (R-S.C.) said on Monday that he agreed with Majority Leader John Thune that the Senate should vote on crypto market-structure legislation in July, saying the committee had advanced a bipartisan bill that would "deliver clear rules of the road, protect consumers, and keep innovation in America." It was "time to deliver for the American people," Scott wrote on X.

The push gained support inside the administration. Patrick Witt, Executive Director of the President's Council of Advisers for Digital Assets, also said that "July is shaping up to be quite a month," framing the legislation as a way to cement "American leadership in global financial markets for decades to come" around the nation's 250th anniversary.
JPMorgan Is Not Opposing CLARITY – But Wants Stronger Safeguards
Not everyone reads the post as opposition to the bill. Journalist Eleanor Terrett said on Monday that the authors stopped short of endorsing any specific legislation, instead backing a broader market-structure framework with stronger safeguards while echoing Dimon's concerns about stablecoin yield and illicit finance.
Still, the framing reflects JPMorgan's broader posture. CEO Jamie Dimon emerged as one of the most vocal opponents of the legislation's stablecoin provisions, previously calling Coinbase (COIN) CEO Brian Armstrong "full of sh*t" while attacking the CLARITY Act. Dimon argued that the bill would allow stablecoin issuers to effectively pay interest on deposits without facing the same requirements as banks, and said lenders, including the American Bankers Association (ABA), would oppose it in its current form.
What It Means For Circle
The stablecoin-yield debate lands squarely on Circle (CRCL), the issuer of USD Coin (USDC), the second-largest stablecoin.
CRCL's stock was down over 1% during pre-market trading hours. On Stocktwits, the retail sentiment around CRCL remained in the ‘bearish’ zone, while chatter around it stayed at ‘high’ levels over the past day.
USDC traded near its $1 peg. On Stocktwits, the retail sentiment around USDC remained in the ‘bullish’ zone, while chatter around it also stayed at ‘high’ levels over the past day.
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