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Enemy No. 1 for Wall Street?

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The CEO of Coinbase has found himself at the center of one of the sharpest conflicts between the crypto industry and the traditional financial system. According to The Wall Street Journal, the head of the largest U.S. crypto exchange has effectively earned the unofficial status of “enemy No. 1 for Wall Street” due to his active support for initiatives that allow crypto platforms to offer yields of around 3.5% annually on stablecoins.

For the banking sector, this figure sounds like a sentence. At a time when most traditional banks in the U.S. and Europe continue to pay less than 0.1% annually on deposits, the emergence of an alternative in the form of a “digital dollar” with yields dozens of times higher poses a direct threat of liquidity outflows. And this is not about speculative money, but about mass retail funds that previously sat by default in bank accounts.

WSJ notes that for the average user, the comparison is straightforward: funds are denominated in dollars, volatility risk is absent, access to money is instant, and returns are multiple times higher. Against this backdrop, banks’ arguments about “reliability” and “tradition” are becoming increasingly unconvincing, especially for a younger, technologically savvy generation of customers.

The core problem for Wall Street is that stablecoins undermine the very economics of the banking business. Banks earn money from the spread between nearly free deposits and the higher-yielding assets in which they invest those funds. If depositors can earn 3–4% directly, bypassing banks altogether, the traditional intermediary model begins to crack.

Coinbase’s support for such initiatives is seen by the financial establishment not as innovation, but as a frontal attack. Behind the scenes, according to WSJ, pressure on regulators is intensifying to tighten requirements for yield-bearing stablecoin products, including attempts to classify them as bank deposits and subject them to equivalent regulation.

The CEO of Coinbase, for his part, insists that this is not about undermining the financial system, but about its evolution. In his view, users have long deserved fair returns on their money, especially in an era of high interest rates, when banks continue to keep margins to themselves rather than sharing them with clients. Crypto platforms, by contrast, offer a more transparent model, where yields are generated by placing reserves in short-term U.S. Treasury bills and other low-risk instruments.

What particularly alarms Wall Street is the scale of the potential impact. The stablecoin market already exceeds hundreds of billions of dollars, and even a partial shift of bank deposits into such instruments could create stress within the traditional funding system. For banks, this would mean higher funding costs, lower profitability, and the need either to raise deposit rates or lose customers.

In effect, the conflict surrounding Coinbase goes far beyond a single company. It reflects a deeper structural shift: a transition from a bank-centric financial system to a model in which users interact directly with digital financial instruments, earning returns without traditional intermediaries. That is precisely why Wall Street’s reaction has been so sharp.

In this context, the “enemy No. 1” label appears less as a personal characterization of Coinbase’s CEO and more as a symbol of the old system’s resistance to new financial realities. The question is no longer whether this process can be stopped, but how painful it will be for traditional banks and how quickly they will be forced to adapt to a new competitive landscape.

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