According to a report by Korean outlet Tokenpost, Coinbase and Ethena Labs (ENA) jointly launched an on-chain lending vault called the “Steakhouse High Yield USDC Vault” on June 13 (local time). Operating standards are set by Steakhouse Financial, with capital allocated on top of the Morpho protocol based on USDe. On the surface, users are simply depositing USDC, but the underlying structure mixes in collateral from USDe, a synthetic stablecoin—yield and risk scale up together. To be clear: as of publication, we have not been able to find a corresponding English-language announcement on Coinbase’s official blog or the Ethena Labs official website. The core facts above are currently backed only by this single secondhand Tokenpost report, and readers should treat this as “reportedly” rather than a confirmed official release.
Editorial take: this is a yield rail, not a payment rail
Let’s get the most important point out of the way first: this news has almost no direct connection to the USDT virtual card in your hand.
The core function of a USDT card is a “payment rail”—you top up with a stablecoin, and the card network (Visa / Mastercard) converts it into fiat at settlement so you can spend. What Coinbase just launched is a “yield rail”—you lock USDC into a vault in exchange for APY. These are two entirely different product logics, and confusing them is one of the most common mistakes beginners make.
Specifically, for card users:
- Coinbase Card holders—the card’s own spending, settlement, and exchange-rate logic doesn’t change just because there’s a new vault product. The vault is a separate module within the Coinbase App; if you don’t actively deposit into it, it has nothing to do with you.
- Holders of Asia-Pacific-route cards like MPCard—even less relevant. MPCard runs on USDT top-ups plus Asia-Pacific BIN settlement, which is on a completely separate track from the Coinbase ecosystem, USDC, and Ethena.
The real risk shows up in one specific scenario: you see the words “high yield” and move stablecoins originally set aside for spending on your card into chasing this APY. Within a 90-day window, it’s worth noting that early-stage vaults like this typically include incentive subsidies in their high APY—this is an editorial inference based on general patterns seen in DeFi yield products, not officially disclosed data from Coinbase for this specific product. Once incentives taper off, actual yields tend to decline—defer to whatever data the official page publishes going forward.
Historical parallel: synthetic stablecoin collateral is not a new story
Packaging synthetic stablecoins like USDe into a product that “looks like a normal USDC deposit” has caused trouble in the market before.
The most direct parallel is UST/Anchor in May 2022: Anchor Protocol attracted users with close to 20% APY to deposit the algorithmic stablecoin UST—on the surface, a “high-interest stablecoin deposit,” but underneath, a fragile algorithmic peg mechanism. When it collapsed, tens of billions of dollars in market value evaporated. The similarity between that case and this one: users perceive a “stablecoin deposit,” but bear the risk of the underlying synthetic mechanism. The difference is that USDe’s collateral structure (delta-neutral hedging) is entirely different from a purely algorithmic stablecoin like UST—Ethena has publicly disclosed its reserve and hedging logic, and the transparency and nature of the risk are not the same thing. These cannot simply be equated.
Another parallel is stablecoin depegging events themselves: USDC has historically experienced brief discounts due to reserve-bank risk. Such events are a reminder that “stablecoin = $1” is not an iron law under extreme market conditions. For the specific discount magnitude and timing, consult the reserve disclosures on Circle’s official transparency page.
Regulation and compliance: a gray area for yield products
Two things need to be distinguished:
- Spending with USDC/USDT—a relatively clear form of payment activity in most jurisdictions.
- Earning APY on stablecoins—falls into a gray area of securities/wealth-management regulation in many regions, and is explicitly restricted in some.
If you’re an Asia-Pacific user, we recommend first getting clear on the rules in your own location. For example, if you plan to use the Coinbase ecosystem, Japan-based users can refer to our Japan compliance guide, and Hong Kong users can refer to our Hong Kong compliance guide—the regulatory stance on stablecoin yield products differs noticeably between the two. This site does not have a dedicated Korea compliance page; Korean users should defer to the latest announcements from their local financial regulators (FSC/FSS) rather than applying rules from other countries.
The rough boundary is: simply holding and spending stablecoins is a permitted gray-area activity in most regions; offering stablecoin interest-bearing products to the public requires licensing in many regions and falls into a clearly restricted category—this is also why such products are often region-blocked.
Milestones worth watching next
- Official Coinbase/Ethena announcements—the core facts are currently backed only by Tokenpost; waiting for an official English-language page to confirm this is the top priority.
- The APY decay curve of the vault—look at the actual yield 30 days after launch to gauge how much is early-stage incentive versus sustainable return.
- Disclosure of USDe’s collateral composition—whether Ethena updates its reserve and hedging data in tandem will determine how visible the risk is.
- Regional block lists for “stablecoin interest-bearing products”—whether your location is excluded directly determines whether you can use it at all.
Editorial recommendations
- Users holding Coinbase Card or MPCard purely for spending: no action needed. This vault doesn’t affect your card’s settlement.
- Users considering moving card funds to chase this APY: wait for the official announcement to be confirmed, then check the 30-day APY decay data—don’t go all in while it’s still at the “reportedly” stage. Keep the payment rail and yield rail managed separately—money for spending stays on the card; money chasing yield goes into a separate position at your own risk.
- Users applying for a new card: card selection should be based on settlement stability, fees, and BIN approval rates—not on whether the issuer happens to have a high-yield vault attached. Evaluate these two things separately; see our 2026 Top 5 Card Picks and Lowest Fee Card Comparison.
In one line: high yield is a story on the yield side; your card is a tool on the payment side. Don’t let the former’s noise distract from the latter’s choice.