Picture of the author

Abel

06/23 11:30

How the CLARITY Act would reshape crypto rules beyond America

A bill stuck on the Senate calendar in Washington would set rules far past the United States border. The reason is the same one that made European privacy law a global standard, and the dollar makes the reach wider still.






Summary






The CLARITY Act is a U.S. bill, but its effects would travel globally.



Market access could make American crypto definitions a default operating standard.



Dollar stablecoins give Washington’s crypto rules an even wider reach.



The biggest global split is likely to be between the U.S. framework and Europe’s MiCA regime.








The CLARITY Act is a United States market-structure bill, and most coverage treats it as a domestic fight over which agency regulates which token. That framing misses the larger consequence.



If the bill clears the Senate floor and reaches President Trump’s desk, its effects will not stop at the American coastline. A company in Singapore, an exchange in the Cayman Islands, and a token team in Lisbon will all change how they operate because of a law passed in Washington.




JUST IN: Senator Lummis warns America cannot lead international digital asset standards talks without passing the Clarity Act. Other nations will fill the vacuum and write rules that may not align with U.S. values https://t.co/NFsjGXWGUB pic.twitter.com/DxvzbG5Gvk— crypto.news (@cryptodotnews) June 1, 2026




This is how financial rules from a large market travel. They do not require treaties or foreign adoption.



They spread because the market is too big to ignore and the currency at the center is too important to route around. The CLARITY Act, paired with the stablecoin law that already passed, would push American definitions of what a crypto asset is and how it must be handled into jurisdictions that had no vote on either one.












You might also like:





Ripple settled a tokenized Treasury with JPMorgan. What it means for XRP







What the bill sets at home, in brief



The domestic mechanics are worth a short recap, since the global effects flow directly from them. The CLARITY Act draws a jurisdictional line through the crypto market.



The Commodity Futures Trading Commission gets authority over digital commodities and their spot markets, while the Securities and Exchange Commission keeps authority over assets sold as investment contracts. A token can move from the securities bucket toward the commodity bucket as its network grows more decentralized, which gives projects a path out of securities treatment that did not clearly exist before.



The bill cleared the Senate Banking Committee on May 14 in a 15-to-9 vote and now sits on the Senate Legislative Calendar as item 423, eligible for a full floor vote that needs 60 senators to pass. It still has to be reconciled with a separate Senate Agriculture Committee version, merged with the House bill that passed in 2025, and signed.




NEW: Senator Tim Scott calls the Clarity Act the future of finance. It lays the rules of the road and positions America as the crypto capital of the world, building finance under American laws and values https://t.co/NFsjGXXeK9 pic.twitter.com/JgQTeCCLL0— crypto.news (@cryptodotnews) June 2, 2026




The path is real but tight, with the August recess acting as the practical deadline before the calendar turns hostile. For readers who want the domestic breakdown, the full CLARITY Act explained walks through the jurisdictional split in detail.



This piece picks up where that one ends, at the border.



Why an American law sets foreign behavior



There is a well-documented pattern in which one large market’s rules become everyone’s rules, and it has a name in policy circles.



When the European Union passed its privacy law, companies worldwide rebuilt their data practices to match, because serving European users required compliance and maintaining two separate systems was more expensive than adopting the strict standard everywhere. Scholars call that the Brussels effect.



The United States is positioned to produce a Washington version in crypto, and the lever is market access.



The American crypto market is the deepest pool of capital and users in the industry. An exchange that wants American customers, a token that wants to list on American venues, and an issuer that wants American institutions as buyers all have to meet American rules to reach them.



Once a firm builds its product to satisfy the CLARITY framework for the American market, running a looser version elsewhere adds cost and legal exposure for little benefit. The cheaper path is to hold the whole operation to the American standard.



Multiply that across enough firms and the American definition of a digital commodity becomes the working definition that global products are built around, whether or not any foreign regulator adopts it. That is how the CLARITY Act reaches beyond America: not by command, but by access.



The dollar widens the channel. Most of the crypto economy is priced, settled, and stored in dollar stablecoins.



Rules that govern how those dollars move on-chain reach anywhere those dollars are used, which is nearly everywhere. A framework that sets how American firms issue and handle digital assets becomes the framework that the dollar’s on-chain plumbing runs on, and that plumbing does not check passports.












You might also like:





XRP price eyes drop to $1 as bearish crossover forms







CLARITY against the European model



The world already has one comprehensive crypto regime in force, and comparing it to CLARITY shows how two large markets can pull firms in different directions.



The European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets regulation, known as MiCA, took effect ahead of the American framework and takes a different shape. MiCA is a single, comprehensive licensing regime that covers issuers and service providers across the bloc, with detailed categories for stablecoins and other tokens and one passport that lets a licensed firm operate across member states.



It is broad and prescriptive, and it treats crypto as its own regulated category with its own rulebook.



CLARITY takes the American route of slotting crypto into existing regulators, splitting oversight between the securities and commodities agencies rather than building one new rulebook. The decentralization test that lets a token shift toward commodity treatment has no clean European equivalent.



So a token team faces two large markets with two different theories of how their asset should be classified. A token that qualifies as a sufficiently decentralized digital commodity in the American system might be handled as a different category under MiCA, and a stablecoin faces one set of reserve and disclosure rules in Europe and another under the American stablecoin law.



The divergence is sharpest around stablecoins, and the contrast is instructive. The European regime places firm limits on how large a non-euro stablecoin can grow as a means of payment within the bloc, a deliberate guard against the euro being displaced by dollar tokens on European soil.



The American framework points the other way, clearing the path for dollar stablecoins to scale as far as the market will carry them. A global stablecoin issuer therefore faces a built-in conflict, encouraged to expand in one market and capped in the other, and has to run its product differently on each side of the Atlantic.



Token classification splits in a similar way. The American decentralization test offers a route by which a token can shed securities treatment over time, while the European approach slots tokens into fixed categories with no equivalent path.



So the same asset can carry two different legal identities depending on which market is asking.



Firms respond to that divergence the way they always do. They build to the stricter or more market-critical standard where they can, run parallel compliance where they must, and let the two largest markets effectively co-write the global baseline.



The practical result is that most serious crypto businesses will end up shaped by Brussels and Washington together, with smaller jurisdictions importing whichever standard their firms already follow.



A token team launching today has to ask not only whether its asset clears American rules, but whether the structure that clears America also survives Europe. The answer increasingly shapes how tokens are designed from the first line of code.



Where the two regimes agree, the agreement quietly hardens into the global default. Where they clash, firms route around the conflict in ways that fragment the market along the fault line between Washington and Brussels.



The dollar stablecoin export



The piece of the American framework with the longest global reach is not the commodity definition. It is the treatment of dollar stablecoins, and CLARITY arrives on top of a stablecoin law that already passed.



The United States enacted the GENIUS Act, its first federal stablecoin framework, in 2025. That law sets reserve, disclosure, and issuer rules for payment stablecoins.



CLARITY layers market-structure rules on top of the broader digital-asset economy that those stablecoins move through. Together they give American-regulated dollar stablecoins something competitors abroad struggle to match, which is a clear federal legal footing in the world’s reserve currency.




NEW: CFTC Chairman Mike Selig joins GOP Majority Whip on Capitol Hill to push the Clarity Act. Focuses on clear rules to unlock innovation, protect software developers, and cement the U.S. as the crypto capital of the world pic.twitter.com/xoUkHCkJQU— crypto.news (@cryptodotnews) June 6, 2026




That combination is an export engine. In countries with weak local currencies or unstable banking, people and businesses already reach for dollar stablecoins as a store of value and a payment rail.



A federally sanctioned American framework makes those tokens look safer and more legitimate, which accelerates their use across emerging markets. The consequence reaches into monetary policy.



When citizens of a country hold and transact in American dollar tokens instead of the local currency, the local central bank loses some grip on its own money supply, a pressure that economists describe as digital dollarization. A bill debated in a Senate committee thus touches the monetary sovereignty of countries whose officials never testified.



Foreign regulators see this clearly, which is why several are racing to authorize their own local-currency stablecoins and to set rules for foreign ones. The American framework is forcing a global response not because it commands anything abroad, but because the dollar tokens it blesses are already in everyone’s pockets.



The dynamic plays out hardest in the places with the least stable money. In a country with high inflation or strict capital controls, a citizen who can hold a dollar stablecoin on a phone gains an escape from a currency that loses value by the month.



That escape is a private good for the individual and a public problem for the state, since every dollar held in a stablecoin is a dollar not held in the local bank, not subject to the local central bank’s policy, and not captured by the local tax net in the usual way.



When the United States stamps those dollar tokens with federal legitimacy, it makes the escape safer and more popular, which speeds the erosion. Some governments will fight this with bans that mostly fail, since stablecoins move peer to peer and are hard to stop.



Others will try to issue their own digital currencies to compete, with mixed results. A few will accept the dollarization and try to tax and regulate around it.



None of them got a vote on the American law that accelerated the choice.



There is a strategic layer to this that Washington understands well. A world that runs its on-chain economy on American-regulated dollar tokens is a world where American financial reach extends into every market those tokens touch, including the ability to freeze, trace, and enforce.












You might also like:





Bitcoin price drops toward key support as U.S.-Iran news sparks profit-taking, can bulls defend?







Promoting compliant dollar stablecoins is not only a market-structure decision. It is a quiet extension of the dollar’s global role into the on-chain era, and the crypto framework is one of the instruments that carries it there.



Other powers, including China with its own digital currency efforts, are competing for exactly this position, which is why the American framework is read abroad as much as a geopolitical move as a regulatory one.



One offshore exchange, walking through the choice



Make the abstraction concrete by sitting inside a single firm’s decision.



Picture a crypto exchange headquartered outside the United States, incorporated in a light-touch island jurisdiction, serving users across dozens of countries. Today it lists tokens freely and sorts out the legal questions later.



The American framework lands, and the firm faces a series of forks.



First, American users. If the exchange wants them, or even wants to avoid penalties for serving them accidentally, it has to register under the American regime, which means provisional registration as the rules phase in, plus the disclosure and conduct obligations that come with it.



Second, listings. A token that the American framework would treat as an unregistered security becomes a liability to list anywhere the exchange touches American users or American banking.



So the listing committee starts screening new tokens against American definitions even for its non-American markets, because maintaining two listing standards is costly and risky.



Third, stablecoins. The exchange leans toward American-regulated dollar stablecoins for settlement, since those now carry the cleanest legal status, which pulls its entire settlement layer toward American-sanctioned tokens.



By the end of that walk, an exchange that never set foot in the United States has reshaped its registration, its listings, and its settlement currency around American law. It did so for access and risk reduction, not because any foreign regulator told it to.



That is the Washington effect working one firm at a time, and it is how a domestic bill becomes a global standard without a single foreign signature.



The harder question of decentralized finance and developers



The offshore exchange has a clear path because it is a company with an address and a bank account. The reach of American rules gets blurrier, and more contested, when it meets the parts of crypto built to have no company at all.



Decentralized finance protocols run as code on public chains, often governed by token holders scattered across the world, with no headquarters to register and no executive to serve a subpoena. Software developers who write open-source code that anyone can use sit in a similar gray zone.



The American bill has spent much of its committee fight on exactly these questions, with one camp pushing to give the Treasury power to sanction decentralized finance services, pointing to the earlier sanctioning of a crypto mixer, and another camp pushing to shield developers from liability for writing neutral tools.



How those fights resolve will ripple far past American borders, because the developers and protocols in question are global by design.



If the final framework treats publishing code as a regulated activity or makes front-end operators liable for the protocols they expose, developers everywhere face a choice about whether to block American users, geofence their interfaces, or accept American legal exposure.



Many will geofence, which fragments the open networks that were supposed to be borderless. If instead the framework carves out genuine protections for developers and truly decentralized systems, it sets a permissive global reference point that other jurisdictions may copy or react against.



The point is that the most borderless corners of crypto are the ones where American rules create the most friction, because there is no clean company to absorb the compliance. The world will feel that friction wherever the code runs, which is everywhere.












You might also like:





Ethereum price drops below $1.7K as ETF outflows hit sentiment







The competition the bill triggers abroad



American rules do not land in a vacuum. Other financial centers have spent years positioning themselves as crypto-friendly alternatives, and a finished American framework sharpens that competition rather than ending it.



Singapore, Hong Kong, the United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom, and Switzerland have each built licensing regimes designed to attract crypto firms that wanted clear rules before the United States offered any. For years their pitch was certainty that America lacked.



Once the United States sets its own clear framework, that pitch weakens, and these centers shift to competing on the details: faster licensing, lighter capital requirements, friendlier tax treatment, or clearer treatment of decentralized finance and developers, the very areas where the American bill remains contested.



Capital and talent move toward whichever regime offers the best mix of clarity and freedom. If the American framework lands as workable, it pulls some activity back onshore from the offshore havens that grew during the years of American uncertainty.



If it lands as heavy or stalls in the Senate, the alternative centers keep their edge and continue drawing firms that want rules without American-level friction. Either way, the American decision sets the terms that every competing jurisdiction now has to answer, which is its own kind of global reach.




NEW: SEC Chair Atkins says the US must be the crypto capital of the world but that requires clarity. Atkins praised onchain delivery versus payment as a real innovation that stabilizes the marketplace by eliminating gaps between buying and selling https://t.co/NFsjGXXeK9 pic.twitter.com/0VSYJHkdVc— crypto.news (@cryptodotnews) June 7, 2026




The specifics of how each center is positioned show how live this contest is. Singapore built a licensing regime through its central bank that became a magnet for exchanges and token projects wanting Asian credibility with clear rules, and it has been selective, approving a limited set of firms to signal quality.



Hong Kong reopened its doors to crypto with a dedicated licensing scheme as part of a broader push to reclaim its status as a digital-asset hub, with Beijing watching from a distance. The United Arab Emirates, through Dubai and Abu Dhabi, built standalone crypto regulators and aggressive incentives that pulled in firms fleeing uncertainty elsewhere, offering speed and a tax environment American firms cannot match at home.



The United Kingdom has moved more slowly but is building its own regime with an eye on keeping London relevant. Switzerland’s long-standing crypto valley around Zug continues to host foundations and token issuers under rules that predate most of the competition.



Each of these centers spent the years of American silence selling certainty. A finished American framework does not erase their appeal, but it changes the sales pitch.



The competition shifts from who has rules at all to who has the most workable rules on the contested edges, decentralized finance, developer liability, staking, and token classification. Those are precisely the areas where the American bill still carries unresolved fights, which means the foreign centers will aim their pitch at whatever the United States leaves ambiguous or heavy.



The American choice does not end the competition. It tells every rival where to compete.



What passage, or failure, would signal to the world



The vote in Washington carries a message far beyond its legal text, and both outcomes say something to the rest of the world.



Passage would signal that the largest financial market has decided crypto is a permanent, regulated part of the system rather than a problem to be enforced away. That removes a cloud that has sat over institutional adoption everywhere, since global banks and asset managers often wait for American clarity before committing in any market.



A finished framework would likely pull foreign regulators toward harmonizing with it, accelerate dollar-stablecoin adoption abroad, and set off a fresh round of competition among financial centers to keep pace. Senator Lummis has warned that failure in the current window could push meaningful market-structure law to 2030, and a delay of that length would read abroad as American hesitation, ceding the standard-setting role to Europe’s regime and to the Asian and Gulf centers that already have rules in force.



This is where why passage is uncertain matters. The global consequences are large, but the Senate path is still narrow, and foreign regulators are planning around both outcomes.



There is an enforcement dimension that travels with the framework and lands hardest abroad. The bill carries dedicated funding to fight illicit crypto activity, reported at around $150 million, and it pulls digital-commodity exchanges, brokers, and dealers under anti-money-laundering obligations.



Those obligations do not stop at the border. An exchange anywhere that touches American users or American banking inherits the reporting and screening duties, and the firms that handle dollar stablecoins become nodes in a compliance network that American authorities can see into and act on.



Combined with the dollar’s reach, this gives the United States a tracing and enforcement footprint that extends wherever the regulated tokens and registered intermediaries operate. A framework sold at home as market structure functions abroad as an extension of American financial surveillance and sanctions power, which is one more reason foreign capitals read the bill as something larger than an American housekeeping exercise.



This is also why the banking industry’s fight over CLARITY matters outside the United States. The stablecoin provisions are not only a domestic banking fight; they influence which dollar tokens scale globally and who controls the yield, compliance, and customer relationship attached to them.



The deeper point is that the world is not waiting politely for the United States to decide. It is positioning around both outcomes.



The reason a Senate floor schedule matters in Lagos, London, and Singapore is that the American market and the American dollar are large enough that a domestic crypto law is never only domestic. The CLARITY Act would reshape rules beyond America for the same reason American financial decisions always do, which is that the size of the market and the reach of the currency turn a national choice into a global one.



Whether it passes before the August recess or slips toward the end of the decade, the rest of the world has already started writing its own rules with one eye on Washington.



The lesson for anyone tracking crypto regulation is that the most important votes for a global industry are often cast in a single national legislature. The reach of those votes is set by the size of the market and the spread of the currency behind them.



By both measures, the American framework will be felt in places that never debated it, long after the Senate moves on to its next fight.



This article is information, not legal or investment advice. Legislative status and timelines reflect reporting available as of June 23, 2026, and the bill’s path, text, and prospects can change.












Read more:





South Korea crypto remittances jump 380% in three years, surpassing banks
#HTX Invites You to Share 600K USDT in Gift Packs#2026 World Cup Posting Challenge on HTX Square#1$ Margin Trade
25Compartir

Todos los comentarios0Lo más recientePopular

avatar
Lo más recientePopular