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Yield Ban Pulls Stablecoin Back to Payment Basics: Circle Stock Plummets, USDC Holds Steady
Revenue Ban Targets Business Models, Not Underlying Technology
In simple terms: profits are being cut off, payment attributes are returning, but the foundation of USDC and the entire stablecoin infrastructure remains intact.
@StockSavvyShay’s tweet about CRCL dropping 15% triggered more than just a price move—it signaled a shift in regulatory thinking: the draft “Clear Act” leaked on March 24 aims to ban stablecoin balances from earning “interest-like” rewards, though activity-linked incentives are still permitted. This distinction is crucial—CoinDesk and Barron’s analyzed Circle’s revenue, which is 96% derived from USDC reserve interest.
On-chain data shows a calmer picture than the secondary market: USDC remains steadily pegged around $1 in each 1-hour window, concentration on Hyperliquid is around 65%, and holders aren’t rushing to sell. Meanwhile, Bitcoin touched $70k intraday (Trump delaying Iran strike, easing geopolitical tensions), but discussions still focus on this regulatory news—macro volatility seems unaffected.
Don’t fall into doomsday panic:
Sellers and market makers’ perspectives: Mizuho’s Dan Dolev says the ban impacts “savings account-like” products; Keyrock’s Amir Hajian calls it a “death blow” to yield models. Over 300k views and 1.7k likes on related tweets—Crypto Twitter generally interprets this as banks protecting their 3.5-4% deposit spreads. But this view overlooks that opponents that don’t generate yields (USDT, XRP used for payments) might benefit.
Trading and Positions: Narratives Are Changing, Pricing Hasn’t Kept Up
That tweet went viral with over 15 high-quality retweets, turning the “regulatory progress” narrative into “banks won.” Various viewpoints:
In the short term, data supports a bearish view; long-term, this could accelerate substitutes without yields gaining market share. Multiple sources point to a 15-19% drop around March 24.
Positioning thoughts:
Key takeaway: It’s probably too late to short CRCL now; most of the decline has priced in the tightening of yields. Builders and patient investors will benefit from forced innovation; traders should watch for narrative shifts in April’s revisions; institutions already favoring “payment/activity incentives” have an advantage.
In one sentence: The yield ban is a re-pricing of “passive interest” business models, not a destruction of stablecoin infrastructure itself.
Conclusion: It’s too late for traders to short CRCL profitably; long-term builders and holders are more favored; early movers betting on “payment/activity incentives” have seized the advantage.