March 29, 2026
ChainGPT
Draft Clarity Act Would Ban Stablecoin Yield, Risking DeFi Recentralization — 10x Research
The latest draft of the federal Clarity Act is drawing attention not just for its stablecoin provisions, but for how those rules could reshape decentralized finance (DeFi) more broadly, according to a new report from 10x Research.
At the heart of the proposal is a ban on offering yield—or anything that resembles yield, such as rewards—on stablecoin balances. That change would strip stablecoins of their role as on‑chain savings vehicles and recast them primarily as payment rails. “This represents a clear re-centralization of yield,” writes Markus Thielen, founder of 10x Research. Under the bill’s logic, returns would be pulled back into banks, money‑market funds and regulated wrappers, leaving crypto-native platforms with less room to compete on rates.
Early hopes that the Clarity Act would push users from centralized platforms to DeFi may therefore be misplaced. That optimistic scenario depends on DeFi escaping the same restrictions. But 10x Research argues the bill’s framework is likely to reach into front-end interfaces and token models—especially where fee generation or token governance starts to look like equity—bringing many on‑chain projects under regulatory scrutiny.
If the rules are applied broadly, a large swath of the sector could be affected. Decentralized exchanges such as Uniswap, SUSHI and dYdX, together with lending protocols like Aave and Compound, could face tighter constraints on how they operate and how they distribute value. The practical effects might include lower trading volumes, reduced liquidity and weaker demand for governance and utility tokens.
Not all consequences are negative for the crypto industry. The proposal arguably strengthens the role of regulated infrastructure providers: by embedding stablecoins more firmly into payment systems, it could be “structurally bullish” for stablecoin issuers and other infrastructure players, Thielen says—naming Circle as a likely beneficiary.
In short, while the Clarity Act is presented as a stablecoin and consumer‑protection measure, its spillover effects could reshape incentives across DeFi—reallocating yield away from decentralized protocols and toward regulated entities, and forcing projects to rethink token design and front‑end services.
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