Banks Are Trying to Kill the Biggest Crypto Bill in US History Four Days Before the Senate Vote
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The most important crypto bill in US history is four days from a Senate vote. Banks are trying to kill it. On May 1, a bipartisan compromise on stablecoin yield was reached after months of negotiation. The Senate Banking Committee scheduled the markup vote for May 14 immediately after.
Within days of the vote being announced, the American Bankers Association, Bank Policy Institute, and three other major banking lobbies submitted a joint letter demanding changes to the compromise text they had literally just signed off on.
What the Compromise Actually Says
The deal is straightforward. Crypto companies cannot pay passive yield on stablecoins the way banks pay interest on deposits. But they can offer rewards tied to actual usage and transactions on their platforms. Thatâs the line that was negotiated. Banks agreed to it. Crypto companies agreed to it. The Senate scheduled the vote.
Now, banks are saying even that is too generous. They want the entire rewards framework scrapped.
What Banks Are Actually Worried About
The official talking points are about consumer protection. The real concern is with the data. Banks have stated explicitly that yield-bearing stablecoins could reduce consumer, small business, and farm loans by 20% or more. People would move money from bank accounts into crypto platforms. Banks would have less to lend. Profits would drop.
This isnât about protecting users. Itâs about protecting deposits. The compromise was already designed to address that, which is why crypto companies accepted it. Banks signed off and then turned around four days from the vote to demand more.
The May 21 Deadline Matters
If the bill misses the May 21 Memorial Day recess deadline, the whole thing gets pushed off the Senate calendar. A full year of negotiations goes to zero. The bill doesnât come back in 2026 in any meaningful form. Banks know this. The timing of the new objections lines up perfectly with the deadline pressure.
Trump has said publicly he wonât let bankers ruin this crypto bill. That matters because executive pressure can keep the May 14 markup on schedule even if banking lobbies push for delays.
Whatâs Ahead for Crypto Bill
The Senate Banking Committee votes on May 14. Banks just tried to renegotiate a compromise they agreed to less than two weeks ago. The May 21 recess deadline is the real target. If the bill doesnât move forward this week, a year of work disappears. Banks know exactly what theyâre doing, and theyâre doing it now because the timing is the leverage.
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