JPMorgan Chase executives Umar Farooq and Peter Muriungi expressed the bank’s qualified support for the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act on June 29, 2026, while concurrently issuing stern warnings regarding potential systemic vulnerabilities.
In a detailed blog post, Farooq, the global co-head of JPMorgan Payments, and Muriungi, CEO of Digital Assets and Blockchain Solutions, argued that while the proposed legislation could help the industry mature, it must not allow digital asset platforms to sidestep the rigorous investor protection and anti-money laundering (AML) standards that govern traditional finance.
JPMorgan targets stablecoin yields and shadow banking risks
The intervention by the nation’s largest bank comes as the U.S. Senate races to advance the legislation, often referred to as the CLARITY Act, before the upcoming August recess.
While JPMorgan acknowledges that tokenization and programmable money could revolutionize cross-border payments and reduce settlement times, the bank’s leadership remains focused on what could go wrong if Congress fails to pair regulatory clarity with strong protections. This tension is particularly visible as market sentiment shifts during the CLARITY Act’s progress through various congressional committees.
The primary point of contention for JPMorgan involves the treatment of stablecoin yields. Farooq and Muriungi warned that allowing stablecoin issuers to provide interest-like rewards or “cashback” on idle balances creates a precarious environment.
Key details
They argued that these products essentially function like bank deposits but should not be permitted to operate outside the capital, liquidity, and consumer protection rules that apply to traditional banks. Without these safeguards, consumers might assume they have protections that do not exist, increasing the risk of rapid withdrawals during market stress.
This position echoes comments made by JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon earlier in June 2026. Dimon stated that the banking industry would fight the bill “down to the wire” if it permitted crypto platforms to offer rewards on customer balances without meeting bank-level regulation.
The bank’s concern is that such yields could create “shadow banking risks,” allowing crypto firms to compete with traditional deposits without facing the same supervisory costs or regulatory requirements. Recent macro warning signs in the crypto market have only intensified the debate over whether these assets require more robust oversight.
Closing anti-money laundering and regulatory loopholes
Beyond capital requirements, JPMorgan is urging lawmakers to preserve and strengthen anti-money laundering and law enforcement tools. Farooq and Muriungi specifically noted that broad exemptions for certain parts of the crypto ecosystem, including decentralized finance (DeFi), could create blind spots for illicit finance and market manipulation.
The bank argued for stronger AML requirements across the digital asset space, warning that exemptions for core infrastructure could effectively conceal ownership.
The executive team emphasized that “labeling matters less than substance.” In their view, if an asset behaves like a security, it should remain subject to traditional disclosure, custody, and market integrity requirements. Similarly, decentralized trading platforms serving as exchanges or brokers should face obligations comparable to their traditional counterparts.
This insistence on regulatory parity is a recurring theme in the bank’s lobbying efforts as it seeks to ensure that innovation does not come at the expense of financial stability.
The uncertain path to legislative passage in 2026
Despite the momentum behind the CLARITY Act, the path to it becoming law this year is narrowing. While the bill cleared the Senate Banking Committee, negotiators are still working to resolve several contentious issues. These include ethics rules for government officials with crypto ties, liability protections for DeFi developers, and the aforementioned stablecoin yield provisions.
As the Senate approaches its August recess, analysts have warned that a failure to pass the bill in the coming weeks would sharply reduce its chances for the remainder of 2026.
The legislative environment remains complex, with several distinct hurdles remains:
- 60-Vote Threshold: The bill requires 60 votes in the full Senate to move forward.
- Reconciliation: Any Senate version must be reconciled with legislation previously passed by the House of Representatives.
- Agency Jurisdiction: The Act aims to resolve the jurisdictional dispute between the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).
It is important to note that JPMorgan’s warnings do not represent a total rejection of blockchain technology. The bank continues to explore the benefits of tokenization and is even broadening its own settlement networks as institutional interest in Ethereum and other networks remains a long-term factor.
However, for a firm of JPMorgan’s size, the priority remains a framework that closes existing gaps rather than creating fresh ones. Whether the U.S. Congress can bridge the gap between Jamie Dimon’s warnings and the ambitions of the crypto industry before the August break remains to be seen.
