Welcome to the US Crypto News Morning Briefing—your essential rundown of the most important developments in crypto for the day ahead.
Grab a coffee and settle in—things in banking and crypto are about to get interesting. What started as a quiet corner of the digital asset market is now nudging its way into the core of traditional finance (TradFi). Some of the biggest shifts may still be on the horizon, and not all banks are equally ready for them.
Crypto News of the Day: Standard Chartered Warns $500 Billion in US Bank Deposits Could Flow to Stablecoins by 2028
Standard Chartered first warned of the threat stablecoins pose to TradFi banks in October, as reported in a previous US Crypto News publication. Now the bank is issuing another warning, only this time, with a timeline.
The rapid adoption of stablecoins could pose a significant threat to US banks, according to Standard Chartered’s Head of Digital Asset Research, Geoff Kendrick.
In a report released today, Kendrick projects that as much as $500 billion (roughly one-third of US bank deposits) could migrate into stablecoins by the end of 2028.
He noted that this shift is not limited to emerging markets, where he previously projected around $1 trillion in deposit outflows over the same period, but is increasingly relevant to developed markets, including the U.S.
Using net interest margin (NIM) income as a percentage of total revenue as a risk indicator, Kendrick identifies regional banks as the most exposed.
Deposits remain a core driver of NIM, meaning any significant outflows to stablecoins could directly impact bank earnings.
In contrast, diversified and investment banks are relatively insulated from these pressures due to broader revenue streams.
Regulatory Uncertainty Compounds the Risk for US Banks
The recent delay in the US CLARITY Act, intended to create a comprehensive regulatory framework for digital assets, highlights banks' potential vulnerability.
The latest draft prohibits digital asset service providers from paying interest or yield to users holding stablecoins. Notably, this restriction prompted Coinbase to remove certain offerings.
Although Kendrick expects the CLARITY Act to pass by the end of Q1 2026, the delay highlights the ongoing challenges that US banks may face as digital asset adoption accelerates.
The risk is not just theoretical. Stablecoins could shift core banking functions such as payments and deposits away from TradFi institutions, creating a structural challenge for banks that rely heavily on deposit-driven income.