The biggest news in crypto finance just dropped, and most people missed it.
On April 13, the White House's top crypto adviser Patrick Witt confirmed that the CLARITY Act's stablecoin yield compromise is advancing, with final hurdles clearing fast. If you have money sitting in a savings account earning 3.5% APY, you need to pay attention.
What the CLARITY Act actually says
Here's the deal: the CLARITY Act draws a clear line between two types of stablecoin yield.
Passive yield, where you just hold a stablecoin and it automatically earns interest, is getting regulated out of existence. Think of it like a savings account without FDIC insurance. The latest text of the bill won't allow rewards on idle balances. Regulators aren't comfortable with that model.
Activity-based rewards, where you earn yield by actually using your money (making payments, transfers, or engaging with the platform), get a green light. This is huge.
Why this matters for your money
Right now, your bank savings account pays somewhere around 3.5-4.5% APY. A year ago it was 5%. The Fed is cutting rates, and your savings yield is going with it.
Stablecoin yield products have been offering 5-7% APY on dollar-denominated assets. The CLARITY Act doesn't kill this. It just says the yield needs to be tied to real activity, not passive holding.
Translation: Apps that combine spending, saving, and earning, where yield comes from actually moving money through the system, are the future. Apps that just park your stablecoins and promise interest? Those are getting squeezed.
The White House vs. the banks
This is where it gets interesting. The White House Council of Economic Advisers released a formal analysis concluding that allowing stablecoin yield would produce only marginal displacement of bank lending. Their report projected that permitting stablecoin yield would shift just $2.1 billion in deposits, roughly 0.02% of total loans outstanding.
Banks pushed back hard, arguing the numbers underestimate the real threat. But the data is on the side of the crypto industry here. The compromise held.
The self-custody difference
Here's what makes this even more interesting. Most stablecoin yield products today are custodial. You hand over your money to a company, and they promise to give it back with interest. Sound familiar? That's exactly the model that blew up with Celsius, BlockFi, and Voyager.
The next generation of yield products keeps your money in your own wallet. Self-custody means you hold the keys. The yield comes from on-chain protocols, not from trusting a company with your deposits.
This is the model the CLARITY Act was designed to protect. Activity-based, transparent, user-controlled.
What to look for
If you're evaluating where to put your savings in 2026, here's the checklist:
1. Self-custody or custodial? After Celsius, this should be question number one. If you can't withdraw your money at any time without permission, that's a red flag.
2. Where does the yield come from? Sustainable yield comes from lending markets, staking, or protocol revenue. If the source isn't transparent, be cautious. Check platforms like DeFiLlama for real-time data.
3. Is it CLARITY Act compliant? Activity-based rewards tied to genuine usage are in. Passive interest on unregulated tokens is out.
4. Can you spend it too? The best products combine saving and spending in one place. Earn yield on your balance, spend it with a card when you need to. No friction.
The bottom line
The CLARITY Act isn't killing stablecoin yield. It's legitimizing it. The apps that combine self-custody, transparent yield, and real spending utility are about to have their moment.
Your bank savings account paying 3.5% just got competition. And this time, you get to hold the keys.
Normies combines self-custody savings with a Visa card, so your money earns yield and you can spend it anywhere. Join the waitlist →