Key Takeaways
- Shares of Coinbase (COIN) declined approximately 8% following the emergence of a CLARITY Act draft that would prohibit interest payments on stablecoin balances
- Circle (CRCL) experienced a steep 18% decline, ending a remarkable rally exceeding 170% since the beginning of February
- The proposed legislation would prohibit rewards that are “economically equivalent to interest” on dormant stablecoin accounts
- Citi’s Peter Christiansen maintained his Buy recommendation on COIN with a price target of $400, suggesting potential gains of 118%
- Wall Street consensus rates COIN as a Moderate Buy, with analysts projecting an average price of $266.15
Coinbase experienced significant turbulence during Monday’s trading session. The cryptocurrency exchange platform saw its shares decline by roughly 8% following the release of an updated version of U.S. stablecoin regulation that alarmed market participants who had viewed yield-generating products as a crucial long-term revenue stream.
The regulatory proposal driving the market reaction is known as the CLARITY Act. According to reports from CoinDesk and confirmation by journalist Eleanor Terrett via X, the newest version would ban the provision of yield “directly or indirectly” on stablecoin accounts — including any compensation “economically equivalent to interest.”
These restrictions would apply comprehensively to exchanges, brokerage firms, and their affiliated entities. Certain activity-driven incentives, such as customer loyalty programs, would remain allowable. Regulatory bodies including the SEC, CFTC, and Treasury Department would receive a twelve-month period to establish detailed implementation guidelines.
Circle (CRCL) suffered an even more pronounced decline than Coinbase, plummeting as much as 18% following the disclosure. This downturn halted an impressive run that had propelled the USDC issuer upward by more than 170% since the start of February.
Both Coinbase and Circle maintain substantial connections to USDC, the digital currency they jointly created. Coinbase generates income from the interest earned on USDC reserves and through yield-related customer activity on its platform. Circle’s fundamental business structure revolves entirely around USDC creation and management.
Implications of the Yield Restriction for USDC
Mizuho’s Dan Dolev offered a straightforward assessment of the potential consequences. Prohibiting passive stablecoin interest could “reduce the use case for Circle in the near-term,” he noted, while simultaneously diminishing the appeal of maintaining USDC holdings on Coinbase’s platform over the long haul.
Futurum Equities’ chief market strategist Shay Boloor was equally candid: “That weakens a key part of the bull case,” contending the limitation constrains USDC’s trajectory toward establishing itself as a genuine store-of-value instrument.
However, not all analysts are retreating from their positions. Peter Christiansen from Citi maintained his Buy stance on Coinbase while preserving his $400 valuation — representing approximately 118% potential appreciation from present price levels. He characterized COIN as a “beta play on CLARITY,” suggesting Coinbase is positioned to gain as regulatory frameworks crystallize, despite potentially unfavorable near-term coverage.
Platform Fundamentals Remain Solid for Coinbase
Christiansen acknowledged some immediate headwinds from retail spread narrowing as Coinbase One membership continues expanding, but emphasized the fundamental economic model stays favorable. He also highlighted nine consecutive quarters of native user expansion as proof that platform engagement remains strong.
Wall Street currently assigns COIN a Moderate Buy rating based on 24 professional assessments — comprising 18 Buy recommendations, 5 Hold ratings, and 1 Sell opinion. The consensus price objective stands at $266.15, indicating approximately 45% appreciation potential from existing market levels.
Robinhood (HOOD) similarly declined 4.7% during the session, demonstrating broader apprehension throughout cryptocurrency-related equities.
The CLARITY Act draft remains under development, with ongoing discussions among legislators, cryptocurrency companies, and banking industry representatives as of March 24. Industry observers have noted the present wording contains sufficient ambiguity to permit more stringent interpretation by subsequent regulatory authorities.
Discussions among stakeholders occurred on March 23 and 24 as participants worked toward reaching a conclusive agreement.


