Quick Take
  • Coinbase executives mounted a coordinated defense of payment stablecoins, pushing back against a Wall Street Journal column.
  • The article questioned whether privately issued digital dollars pose systemic risk to the US economy.
  • Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal and Chief Policy Officer Faryar Shirzad both endorsed the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act.
  • Their statements signaled top-level support for the market-structure bill currently working through the Senate.

What Happened

The Private Money Pushback

The Coinbase CLO, who has pushed for regulatory clarity in past testimony, compared digital dollars to private healthcare and transportation. He argued that the regulatory floor matters more than the issuer.

Shirzad expanded the argument in a longer Coinbase policy response, noting that roughly 90% of M2 already consists of privately issued instruments.

Market Context

Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal and Chief Policy Officer Faryar Shirzad both endorsed the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act. Their statements signaled top-level support for the market-structure bill currently working through the Senate.

These include commercial bank deposits and money market fund shares.

The endorsement lands while the Senate Banking CLARITY vote pushes the bill toward a full floor test. Markets are reading Grewal’s stance as a political marker.

Industry support at this stage could shape final language on stablecoin yield and market-structure rules. Only two windows before midterms remain for CLARITY to pass.

Why It Matters

Coinbase executives mounted a coordinated defense of payment stablecoins, pushing back against a Wall Street Journal column. The article questioned whether privately issued digital dollars pose systemic risk to the US economy.

Grewal framed stablecoin oversight as a risk-management question, not a public-versus-private debate.

“Money that’s “private” isn’t any more inherently risky than healthcare or security or transportation that’s private. It’s how you manage that risk, as well as access and oversight that matters. CLARITY promotes all this,” Grewal stated.

The statute bans loans, leverage, and fractional reserves outright. Bank-style supervision would miss the actual risk profile, Shirzad said.

The Political Signal

Details

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Why GENIUS Differs From Bank Rules

The GENIUS stablecoin framework, signed last July, requires payment issuers to hold cash and short-dated US Treasuries. Reserves must back outstanding tokens one-to-one.

Commercial banks earn their regime because they lend, transform maturities, and run 10-to-1 leverage. Stablecoin issuers do none of those by law.

He also pointed to monthly reserve attestations and real-time on-chain visibility. The framework, he said, offers transparency that bank deposits cannot match.

The question now is whether the Senate can reconcile its version with the House-passed bill. November will close the legislative runway.

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