Coinbase, PayPal offer stablecoin returns despite GENIUS Act

TheCryptoTimesPubblicato 2025-08-05Pubblicato ultima volta 2025-08-05

Coinbase and PayPal are still giving users returns on their stablecoin balances, even though the new GENIUS Act bans stablecoin issuers from offering interest or passive income. Signed into law last month, the GENIUS Act (Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act) provides a legal framework for regulated stablecoins in the U.S. 

The law bans issuers from giving interest or rewards, since lawmakers want stablecoins to be used just for payments, not treated like investments. Yet both Coinbase and PayPal have found a legal workaround. They aren’t the issuers.

During Coinbase’s Q2 earnings call last week, CEO Brian Armstrong informed shareholders that the company will continue to offer 4.1% annual rewards on USDC, one of the most widely used dollar-backed stablecoins. Armstrong explained that Coinbase does not issue USDC, and that what it offers are “rewards,” not interest.

USDC is issued by Circle, not Coinbase. Although both companies co-developed the token, Coinbase formally exited its issuer role in 2023, allowing it to continue incentives without falling under the new law’s restrictions.

PayPal made a similar case. Its stablecoin, PYUSD, offers users 3.7% annual returns via PayPal and Venmo. Though the coin is branded and promoted by PayPal, the actual issuer is Paxos, a regulated financial firm. On its latest earnings call, PayPal CEO James Alexander Chriss described rewards as a key product feature that helps bring new users to the platform.

A Senate staffer familiar with the bill said that the GENIUS Act was intentionally narrow. The law targets only issuers, not payment platforms or secondary market actors, to avoid classifying stablecoins like bank deposits.

While critics argue that these rewards are interest in disguise, the companies maintain they are operating fully within legal boundaries. Regulators might step in later if these rewards become too large to raise concerns or start blurring the line between payments and investments. But for now, Coinbase and PayPal are moving full steam ahead, offering returns while staying just outside the legal line.

Also Read: PayPal Launches ‘Pay with Crypto’ for U.S. Merchants



Letture associate

Zuckerberg Gave the AI Bull Market a Fright

Mark Zuckerberg and Meta inadvertently sent shockwaves through the AI stock market. News that Meta plans to sell its "excess" AI computing power to external clients triggered a trillion-dollar sell-off in AI infrastructure stocks like Nvidia and AMD, while Meta's stock rose. This seemingly simple business move—renting out idle resources—shook a core assumption underpinning the two-year AI bull market: the belief that computing power ("compute") would be perpetually scarce. This scarcity narrative had fueled valuations across the entire supply chain, from GPUs to power suppliers. Meta's motivations are layered: improving hardware utilization during non-peak R&D periods, executing a strategic pivot, and redefining AI infrastructure. Unlike rivals selling APIs, Meta's open-source approach with Llama appears aimed at building an ecosystem where it ultimately profits from the underlying compute, similar to how AWS transformed from Amazon's internal capacity. Meta is essentially offering an integrated "AI factory" service, not just raw GPU rental. The market's fear wasn't Meta selling a few chips, but the signal that GPU supply might become more shareable and efficient, transitioning the industry from a Capex-driven "hoarding" model to an Opex-driven "utilization" model. This could fundamentally reset valuation logic from scarcity to efficiency. While the sell-off reversed somewhat as investors realized this shift is long-term, the direction is set. The move marks a potential inflection point: the era of easy valuation gains from simply buying GPUs may be ending, giving way to an era where operational efficiency and return on AI assets take center stage.

marsbit3 min fa

Zuckerberg Gave the AI Bull Market a Fright

marsbit3 min fa

Arcus Chooses "Stepfather" Robinhood Chain, "Biological Father" dYdX Awkwardly Attempts to Salvage the Situation

Robinhood officially launched its own Layer 2 network, Robinhood Chain. In response, many major DeFi protocols like Uniswap and Chainlink announced integration. A key point of discussion was Arcus, a new decentralized exchange (DEX) developed by the dYdX team, which chose to launch on Robinhood Chain instead of the native dYdX Chain. Arcus offers 24/7, zero-fee trading of 95 tokenized stocks and perpetual contracts. This move sparked community concerns about dYdX Chain potentially being sidelined, causing DYDX token's price to drop over 12%. Critics questioned if dYdX Labs' focus is shifting to Arcus and how DYDX token holders would benefit from Arcus's future growth, especially as its founder mentioned a future Arcus token would allocate a portion to the dYdX community. dYdX founder Antonio Juliano clarified that dYdX Chain will continue operating, but acknowledged its deep decentralization involved trade-offs in performance and user experience. He stated Arcus is a separate product led by a new CEO, responding to market demands for faster, simpler platforms. The dYdX Foundation also confirmed DYDX's role remains unchanged for dYdX Chain governance and staking, with no plans for token migration. However, the core uncertainty remains: if Arcus succeeds, how will that value flow back to dYdX Chain and its DYDX token holders?

Odaily星球日报1 h fa

Arcus Chooses "Stepfather" Robinhood Chain, "Biological Father" dYdX Awkwardly Attempts to Salvage the Situation

Odaily星球日报1 h fa

Trading

Spot
活动图片