Circle CEO Says Stablecoin Yields Won’t Spark Bank Runsm Even at 5%+ APY

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Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire just went on record at Davos 2026 saying stablecoin yields won’t trigger a mass exodus from traditional banks, even if they hit 5% or higher.

Speaking to Bloomberg, he argued the risk is overblown, and people aren’t going to pull money out of FDIC-insured accounts en masse just because a stablecoin pays more.

It’s not a zero-sum game.

What Allaire Actually Said About Stablecoin Yields

Allaire pointed out that stablecoins like USDC are already yielding around 4–5% in some setups (backed by short-term Treasuries and cash equivalents), yet bank deposit outflows haven’t spiked.

He called the “bank run” fear a red herring, stablecoins serve different use cases (fast cross-border payments, DeFi, onchain settlements) and aren’t direct substitutes for checking/savings accounts.

“People keep money in banks for convenience, FDIC protection, and habit.”

Even if yields climb higher, he doesn’t see a systemic threat, banks still win on trust, accessibility, and inertia.

The comment came amid growing chatter about stablecoin regulation, think GENIUS Act, or MiCA updates, and how higher yields could pull capital from traditional finance.

How This Fits Recent Stablecoin Yield and Adoption Trends

Stablecoin yields have been climbing since 2023–2024 as issuers parked reserves in higher-rate Treasuries post-Fed hikes.

USDC and USDT both hit 4–5% ranges in DeFi and CeFi platforms, drawing billions without causing visible bank runs.

We’ve seen similar patterns, high-yield savings accounts offered 4–5% in 2023–2025 and pulled deposits from low-yield banks, but no systemic crisis.

Stablecoins add a twist, global, instant, programmable, but Allaire’s point holds, most people won’t move their emergency fund to crypto for an extra 1–2% when FDIC covers $250K and banks are one tap away.

Regulation is tightening, sure, which could cap yields or add friction, but it’s also legitimizing the sector.

Stablecoins as Parallel Banking Rails

This is similar how fintech and neobanks chipped away at traditional banking without collapsing it.

Think Chime, Revolut, or Wise, higher APYs, better UX, lower fees, yet big banks still hold trillions.

Stablecoins are doing the same onchain, faster remittances (no Western Union 7–10% fees), instant global transfers, and yield without legacy overhead.

Allaire’s take suggests coexistence, not replacement, because stablecoins grab the “fast, global, programmable” use cases while banks keep the “safe, local, insured” moat.

In emerging markets, stablecoins already leapfrog bad banking, but in the West, they’re a parallel rail, not a killer.

The scale? USDC alone has $60B+ in circulation, and that’s huge, yes. But still tiny vs. $18T in US bank deposits.

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5%+ Stablecoin Yields, But What About Risks?

If Allaire’s right, stablecoins can keep growing yields without sparking panic or regulatory crackdowns.

That means more onchain utility and healthier competition for banks. If he’s not right?

Banks might still lose share slowly, especially younger users or international transfers where stablecoins crush fees and speed. No mass run, but steady leakage is real.

And let’s be honest, no one’s moving their entire savings to crypto just for yield when volatility and hacks are still a thing.

Coexistence or Banks Losing Ground?

Some will call Allaire biased, Circle’s CEO has skin in the game. Still, many think banks are asleep and yields will pull more capital over time.

But the data so far backs Allaire, no runs, even at 5%. Banks still win on trust and inertia.

So, Circle’s CEO sees stablecoin yields as additive, not destructive. If he’s right, crypto gets to keep growing without a war on banks.

We’ll see how it plays out when yields push higher or regulation bites.


Disclosure:This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

Kriptoworld.com accepts no liability for any errors in the articles or for any financial loss resulting from incorrect information.

András Mészáros
Written by András Mészáros
Cryptocurrency and Web3 expert, founder of Kriptoworld
LinkedIn | X (Twitter) | More articles

With years of experience covering the blockchain space, András delivers insightful reporting on DeFi, tokenization, altcoins, and crypto regulations shaping the digital economy.

📅 Published: January 23, 2026 • 🕓 Last updated: January 23, 2026
✉️ Contact: [email protected]

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