CLARITY Act Could Shift Stablecoin Yield to AI-Driven Yield-as-a-Service

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Stablecoin regulation is moving forward in the U.S. Senate under the CLARITY Act, which aims to ban passive stablecoin yield on regulated platforms. This legislation now affects exchanges and custodians, with the Tillis–Brooks compromise removing exemptions. Joe Vollono of STBL says the ban won’t kill yield but will shift it to a new model called Yield-as-a-Service, where AI agents help manage compliance. The White House CFT estimates the ban could increase bank lending by $2.1 billion, while imposing an $800 million welfare cost.

The U.S. Senate is moving to unbanned passive stablecoin yield from every regulated platform in the country, as the industry is already engineering its way around it. The CLARITY Act has previously extended a yield prohibition that the earlier Genius Act applied only to issuers and now targets exchanges, brokers, and any custodial intermediary offering APY on idle stablecoin balances.

Joe Vollono, Chief Compliance Officer at STBL, argues that the legislative pressure is not killing yield so much as relocating it. According to him, Yield-as-a-Service becomes the dominant architecture once direct issuer-to-holder yield is prohibited, with AI agents acting as the compliance and execution layer between regulated stablecoins and yield-generating DeFi protocols.

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The CLARITY Act and Yield Ban

The current Senate draft retains prior language banning rewards on idle stablecoin balances held in accounts while explicitly permitting yield generated through transactional activity. The critical legal phrase is “functional or economic equivalent” of bank-deposit interest: if a product looks like a savings APY, it is treated as a savings APY, regardless of its label.

The Tillis–Brooks compromise, driving the current bill, explicitly closes that exemption. Under the new text, the prohibition reaches “all intermediaries, any exchange, any platform holding your stablecoins.”

The White House Council of Economic Advisers models the full prohibition as increasing U.S. bank lending by roughly $2.1 billion while imposing a net welfare cost of $800 million, a cost-benefit ratio of 6.6 that reflects the amount of consumer surplus passive yield that was being generated.

As we know, the Banking and credit-union groups are lobbying hard to keep the ban tight, arguing that stablecoin rewards amount to unregulated shadow banking that competes directly with insured deposits.

Yield-as-a-Service: The Technical Stack It Requires

Vollono’s Yield-as-a-Service framework reframes the compliance constraint as a market-structure shift. If the issuer cannot pay yield and the custodian cannot pay yield, the yield must come from somewhere the law does not yet reach, specifically, from active strategy execution rather than passive balance accumulation.

The architecture requires an AI agent layer positioned between the user’s regulated stablecoin balance and the DeFi protocols generating returns. These AI agents monitor chain liquidity in real time, score protocol risk dynamically, and execute trades to capture yield-generating opportunities. They are the operational core of the model.

The agents do not hold the stablecoins; they route them through compliant DeFi pools, collect returns from transactional activity explicitly permitted under the CLARITY Act carve-outs, and return net yield to users as the product of active management.

The Golden Age of simple Earn programs is closing. What replaces it depends on whether AI agents can close the integration gap before regulators close the transactional yield carve-out too.

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The post Clarity Act Chaos? Automating Compliant Crypto Yield with AI appeared first on Cryptonews.

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