JPMorgan doubles down on stablecoins as crypto rivalry intensifies

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JPMorgan Chase & Co., long known as a traditional financial powerhouse and sometimes crypto skeptic, is increasingly embracing stablecoins and blockchain-based money tokens.

The executive says crypto companies that offer stablecoin rewards must face the same regulations as banks because they provide the same financial services. Dimon emphasizes that competition must follow the same rules when products look the same, saying banks are not afraid of a little challenge.

Dimon and other bank executives have explicitly said they want to be “involved in stablecoins” to understand and participate in what they see as a growing part of the financial system.

Dimon says stablecoin rewards should follow the same rules as banks

Jamie Dimon said stablecoin rewards should be treated like a bank product because they are essentially the same as paying interest on a bank account. In his view, companies that call themselves crypto exchanges do not change the fact that they hold customer balances and pay interest, just like a bank.

However, the banking rule may be exempted if a company issues rewards only for certain activities, such as money transfers. The CEO explained the many laws and standards that banks must adhere to and said it is unfair to impose heavy regulation on one group while favoring the other with light oversight. 

According to Dimon, people will lose trust in the financial system if non-bank companies offer bank-like services without strict customer protection rules.

The debate over whether regulators should allow crypto companies to offer stablecoin rewards without treating them like banks is also evident in Congress, where lawmakers are drafting new crypto-related legislation.

Dimon also focused on the ongoing conflicts around the world and said that if they continue, inflation will keep rising. Similarly, he warned that banks must invest heavily in security, as cyberattacks are among their biggest risks.

As for credit markets, Dimon said high levels of borrowing will negatively affect the next credit cycle because asset prices remain high and some lenders are taking on too much risk. 

According to the Chase CEO, banks are under significant pressure to manage these risks as crypto companies expand into payments, deposits, and rewards, raising many questions about fairness and safety.

Meanwhile, Ripple and XRP supporters claim that they are building an entirely different financial system that will connect currencies between banks and crypto companies and unite the two rather than create competition.

Ripple is building a full financial system

Ripple is expanding its financial services into liquidity control, treasury solutions, brokerage services, and lending. On top of that, developers want to give users more control over their data and transactions with identity solutions, something banks already do. 

Some users on X say Ripple is trying to compete with banks, while others, like EasyA co-founder Phil Kwok, say the world needs a bridge like XRP because financial systems are evolving too quickly.

Kwok explained that the worlds need a neutral bridge between traditional finance and digital currency because some countries may not want to rely too heavily on any single national currency.

With XRP’s auto-bridging feature, trades move automatically across the token when liquidity between two currencies drops. As a result, transfers become more efficient because transactions don’t need a direct trading pair for every possible currency combination.

However, some people say bridge assets like XRP are now obsolete because Stablecoins connect to national currencies, making it easier to move dollars on-chain. Kowk counters this argument by saying that many countries don’t want to rely on the dollar, so XRP remains useful. 

This ties the discussion back to Dimon’s point, where he says a product must follow bank rules if it looks like a bank product. However, Ripple supporters say XRP connects financial systems rather than replacing them, so the disagreement also centers on how each side defines XRP.

Banks operate under strict compliance laws and spend billions on reporting, audits, and security, so Ripple’s expansion into payments, liquidity, lending, and brokerage services puts significant pressure on them.

Meanwhile, supporters of Ripple and XRP say people are already looking for efficient and flexible tools, so XRP will better connect currencies without taking sides. In the end, regulators will determine the rules that guide both sides. 

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