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    Is OpenUSD the answer to bank push back on CLARITY? Hints stablecoin yield concessions will fail

    Open Standard’s Open USD is trying to make the stablecoin yield fight about distribution before the token is live.

    The company announced Open USD on June 30 as a stablecoin for global money movement. Its headline feature is a reserve-sharing model: businesses can mint and redeem at no cost, without artificial volume caps, while partners receive reserve earnings minus a small management fee.

    Open Standard also says Open USD will be operated by an independent company with partner-led governance. Founding CEO Zach Abrams framed the product as a stablecoin built by and for the businesses that will use it.

    Open USD has yet to show live supply, redemption history, reserve attestations, or a visible place in stablecoin market tables. It is expected to launch later in 2026.

    Even so, its stated design points directly at the most contested part of the stablecoin business: reserve economics.

    If U.S. rules limit passive yield to stablecoin holders, Open USD‘s bet is that the fight moves elsewhere. Instead of paying users to sit on tokens, the economic value can flow to merchants, payment processors, wallets, exchanges, marketplaces, DeFi venues, and other companies that drive transaction volume.

    Visa Mastercard and Coinbase join Open USD as partner-led stablecoin increases DeFi yield warVisa Mastercard and Coinbase join Open USD as partner-led stablecoin increases DeFi yield war
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    Infographic showing Open USD reserve economics, CLARITY Section 404 policy limits, stablecoin market scale, and unresolved launch tests.Infographic showing Open USD reserve economics, CLARITY Section 404 policy limits, stablecoin market scale, and unresolved launch tests.

    Open USD puts distribution at the center

    Open Standard’s pitch is simple in public but aggressive in market structure. It describes Open USD as shared infrastructure and says participants can earn revenue based on usage.

    Its announcement lists more than 140 businesses across payments, finance, technology, commerce, and crypto, including Visa, Stripe, Mastercard, BlackRock, BNY, Google, Coinbase, Solana, Base, Aave, Ripple, Fireblocks, Shopify, and DoorDash.

    The partner list maps where the economics could flow. Payment networks control merchant access. Exchanges and wallets control where balances sit. Marketplaces control payout flows.

    DeFi protocols control liquidity venues, while banks and asset managers control the plumbing for trust, custody, and reserves. If those firms can share in reserve economics, a stablecoin issuer’s traditional advantage becomes a distribution negotiation.

    That is why Open USD reads as an attempt to turn stablecoin float into partner compensation. In the classic model, reserve income is the issuer’s economic engine.

    In Open Standard’s stated model, most of that value is supposed to return to the companies that adopt and distribute the stablecoin.

    The caveat is large. Open Standard’s public materials say reserves are maintained at major financial institutions in compliance with U.S. regulatory requirements, but they have yet to fully identify the legal issuer, reserve manager, custodian, redemption counterparties, or reserve composition.

    Those details determine whether the model can satisfy both compliance and marketing teams.

    The strongest economic comparison is Circle. Circle’s 2025 Form 10-K says reserve income represented 96.0% of 2025 revenue and that reserve income depends on stablecoins in circulation and the reserve return rate.

    The filing also shows that distribution is already expensive. Circle reported $1.4 billion of Coinbase-related distribution costs in 2025 and described allocations to Coinbase tied to USDC held on Coinbase’s platform and broader ecosystem growth.

    Coinbase’s 2024 Form 10-K tells the other side of the same arrangement. Coinbase says its stablecoin revenue from Circle is determined by daily income generated from USDC reserves.

    That revenue has exposure to USDC market capitalization, platform balances, approved ecosystem participants, deducted expenses, and interest rates.

    Those filings make Open USD’s market signal sharper. Reserve economics are already moving between issuer and distributor in USDC’s ecosystem.

    Open USD proposes to make that bargain more explicit and more widely available to the companies that can drive usage.

    Circle’s USDC business rides interest rates as partners took $460.6 million of quarterly reserve incomeCircle’s USDC business rides interest rates as partners took $460.6 million of quarterly reserve income
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    Tether sits in a different category. DeFiLlama stablecoin data showed a total stablecoin market capitalization of near $311.4 billion on July 1, with USDT at around $184.4 billion and 59.2% dominance, while USDC was at around $73.4 billion.

    CryptoSlate’s market pages showed a similar gap, with USDT having a far higher 24-hour trading volume than USDC, at $67 billion in exchange volume and $1.5 billion in DEX volume. USDC recorded a sizeable yet smaller $10.8 billion in exchange volume and $1.9 billion in DEX volume.

    Tether’s moat extends beyond reserve yield. It is offshore dollar liquidity, exchange integration, settlement habit, and deep trading-pair usage.

    Open USD can pressure that over time only if it becomes liquid across venues and geographies. Its earlier challenge is to Circle’s institutional claim that USDC is the default regulated stablecoin rail for businesses that need compliance, transparency, and distribution.

    OpenUSD stablecoin illustration showing institutional payments firms driving a new challenge to USDC and stablecoin dominanceOpenUSD stablecoin illustration showing institutional payments firms driving a new challenge to USDC and stablecoin dominance

    CLARITY turns yield into a routing problem

    The policy backdrop gives Open USD its opportunity.

    Section 404 of the Senate Banking Committee’s Digital Asset Market Clarity Act draft would prohibit covered parties from paying direct or indirect interest or yield tied to payment stablecoin balances to restricted U.S. customers or users.

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