JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon rags on Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong’s crypto lobbying push: ‘He’s full of shit’
JPMorgan Chase (JPM) CEO Jamie Dimon had some choice words for Coinbase (COIN) CEO Brian Armstrong after months of their firms clashing over a major crypto bill. A rule on offering interest on dollar-pegged stablecoins, tucked into the Clarity Act, has been a thorn in the banking industryโs side. During a wide-ranging interview on โFox…
JPMorgan Chase (JPM) CEO Jamie Dimon had some choice words for Coinbase (COIN) CEO Brian Armstrong after months of their firms clashing over a major crypto bill.
A rule on offering interest on dollar-pegged stablecoins, tucked into the Clarity Act, has been a thorn in the banking industryโs side. During a wide-ranging interview on โFox Business Networkโs Mornings with Maria,โ Dimon accused Armstrong and Coinbase of using that rule as a form of regulatory arbitrage to compete against full-charter US banks.
When asked if heโs happy about how the Clarity Act is shaping up, Dimon answered, โNo.โ The bill is currently headed for a full Senate vote after passing through the Senate Banking Committee earlier this month.
โWeโll fight it. If we lose, we lose, and weโll live,โ Dimon said.
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon had some choice words for Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong after months of their firms clashing over a major crypto bill. (John Lamparski/Getty Images) ยทJohn Lamparski via Getty Images
Coinbase and CEO Armstrong have said they fought against banking interests in DC over the billโs stablecoin rule to defend the crypto industry. When Fox Businessโs Maria Bartiromo mentioned this point to Dimon, the longtime bank chief added, โHeโs full of shit.โ
โIf he wants to be a bank, be a bank,โ Dimon said. โNo one is going to bow down to this guy, OK, or that company,โ Dimon said. โHeโs the only one, and heโs spending hundreds of millions of dollars in Washington on this thing.โ
In response to Dimonโs comments, Armstrong later on Friday posted a popular meme known as โheated rivalryโ that features he and Dimon squaring in a hockey match.
The clash centers on whether crypto platforms should be permitted to offer yield to their customersโ stablecoin holdings.ย Dimon opined that firms that want to act like a bank should go through the myriad of regulations that banks are subject to.
Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan told Armstrong this point during a conversation at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, earlier this year.
Crypto firms, particularly Coinbase, see the ability to pay interest as a crucial part of their growth engines. They argue itโs a net positive for consumers, but the banking industry worries it closely resembles bank-like products, such as a high-yield savings account.
In an emailed statement, Coinbase chief policy officer Faryar Shirzad said โat the end of the day, we all share the same goal: improving the financial lives of Americans.โ
Shirzad added that โmillions of Americans believe this includes preserving rewards programs and passing clear rules that protect consumers while keeping America at the forefront of financial innovation.โ
Read more:ย How stablecoins work
Itโs far from clear how much stablecoin usage in payments will grow in the coming years, or whether the proliferation of digital assets will suck deposits from US banks.
Thereโs plenty of debate on that front.
The Bank Policy Institute, a key banking advocate in Washington, D.C., has argued that at a $4 trillion market size, stablecoins could cause bank deposits to fall an estimated 19%. That could curtail roughly $2.7 trillion in lending.
The bill currently has the stablecoin rule intact. Armstrong previously rejected a January draft of the bill, prompting weeks of talks where the White House served as a mediator. Eventually, lawmakers landed on a compromise proposal. It aimed to ban interest payments on idle stablecoin balances while permitting carve-outs for transaction-based activities.
Dimon and banking industry trade groups havenโt been happy with the current proposal. Earlier this month, the American Bankers Association and five other bank trade groups called for further โtighteningโ of the stablecoin yield rule. They argued the billโs current language permits loopholes that allow crypto platforms to continue paying yields on idle customer balances.
On the other hand, the White House argued in an April report that fears of deposit flight from banks over stablecoins are overstated. Additionally, the benefits to consumers of allowing yield outweigh a more marginal reduction in bank lending capacity.
CEO of Coinbase Brian Armstrong is interviewed for CNBC in the Russell Senate office building on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., January 15, 2026. REUTERS/Annabelle Gordon ยทREUTERS / REUTERS
Earlier this week, Coinbase, meanwhile, introduced a new direct deposit product earlier this year that advertises a 3.5% interest yield on balances of Circleโs USDC (USDC-USD) stablecoin. A person familiar with Dimonโs thinking said the root of his agitation was likely tied to the release of this product ahead of the Senate vote and after months of negotiations with lawmakers.
The stablecoin issue isnโt the only roadblock in passing the Clarity Act. Democratic senators have called for ethics provisions to be added to the bill. They aim to address Donald Trump and his familyโs ties to the crypto industry, which have significantly deepened since the president entered the White House.
However, President Trump is adamant about the billโs passage.
โUnder my Leadership, we will codify a FUTURE-PROOF Digital Asset Market Structure that cannot be undone by the Crypto Haters. The new Frontier of Finance is being Built in America, and โTRUMPโ will NEVER let Crypto down!,โ the president wrote this week in a Truth Social post.
The bill is expected to be put to a vote on the Senate floor sometime in the coming weeks. With the midterm election season approaching, D.C. insiders are looking at early August as the deadline to pass the legislation.
Updated with Armstrongโs response.
David Hollerith is a senior reporter at Yahoo Finance covering the cryptocurrency and stock markets. Follow him on X at @DsHollers.
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