Patrick Witt Calls Out The Irony At Banks’ Stance On Clarity Act

  • White House crypto advisor Patrick Witt highlighted that the big banks’ unwillingness to reach a compromise with the crypto sector on the Clarity Act discussions will only keep stablecoins unregulated and amplify their concerns about deposit flight.

The digital asset adviser of the White House, Patrick Witt, has pointed out the dilemma the banking sector has gotten itself into due to its continuous rejection of a compromise in the draft Clarity Act. On Saturday, he stated that the logic of the banking side of the negotiations in the proposed legislation puzzled him.

Banks Positioning Themselves in a Dilemma Amid the Clarity Act Delay

Witt highlighted that as long as the parties in the Clarity Act dialogue fail to find a middle ground, the longer it will be for stablecoin issuers to remain unchecked. It could amplify the banking industry’s concerns about deposit flight in the absence of regulations in the crypto sector.

“No compromise on CLARITY means no restrictions on intermediaries offering stablecoin rewards,” said Witt. “If you believe the banks’ argument about deposit flight, this would be catastrophic.”

ADVERTISEMENTEarly this year, Standard Chartered estimated that offering stablecoin rewards could siphon around $500 billion from bank deposits. Meanwhile, the Bank Policy Institute (BPI) projected that such mechanics would cause up to $6.6 trillion in deposit flight.

However, as banks prolong the elevation of the bill in Congress, there’s nothing stopping crypto companies from offering rewards for merely holding stablecoins. Although bank representatives appeared open to limiting stablecoin rewards through “permissible activities,” except simply maintaining a balance of these digital assets, the big banks later apparently reverted to strong opposition.

“Feels like I’m watching an arsonist threaten to burn down their own home,” Witt added.

ADVERTISEMENT## Criticisms Rain Down on ABA of Texas’s Social Media Post

The White House official’s latest comments followed American Bankers Association of Texas President and CEO Christopher Williston VI’s post on social media claiming that the Clarity Act would “compromise local lending and economic production.” Additionally, he emphasized that the same issue would be detrimental to banks’ capability to maintain liquidity for lending and economic growth.

Williston’s noted that the problem shouldn’t be “hard to understand.” But then again, people joined Witt in criticizing ABA and the rest of the banking industry’s persistent attempts to block the crucial provision of the bill.

People urged banks to match or exceed the interest stablecoins are offering holders, instead of killing the competition. That way, customers will stay put even if they have more options for earning from their idle capital. Others noted that community banks earn a higher net interest margin than money center banks because they receive higher returns on their loan portfolios, allowing them to weather rate cuts.

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