CLARITY Act Passes Crucial Hurdle, But a Long Road Remains Ahead

链捕手Опубликовано 2026-05-15Обновлено 2026-05-15

Введение

The CLARITY Act, a major U.S. digital asset market structure bill, has advanced from the Senate Banking Committee with a 15-9 bipartisan vote, ending a four-month legislative standstill. The bill's core aim is to resolve the long-standing jurisdictional conflict between the SEC and CFTC by clearly defining which digital assets are securities or commodities. It also establishes rules for exchanges and custodians while providing protections for non-custodial software developers and blockchain validators, shielding them from being classified as money transmitters. The committee's approval triggered a positive market reaction, with Bitcoin rising and crypto-related stocks outperforming the broader market. However, the passage was secured only after last-minute negotiations and compromises, including the addition of amendments on investor protection, bank activities, and defining "truly decentralized" DeFi projects. Two key Democratic senators provided the crucial swing votes but cautioned that their future support in a full Senate vote is not guaranteed. Significant hurdles remain. The bill must still pass the full Senate, requiring 60 votes, and a major point of contention is a Democratic demand for an ethics clause restricting financial ties between high-level government officials and crypto firms—a provision opposed by Republicans and the White House. Additionally, the bill must be reconciled with a version from the Senate Agriculture Committee. If not passed before the Augu...

Author: Chloe, ChainCatcher

The U.S. Senate Banking Committee yesterday passed the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act (CLARITY Act) in a bipartisan vote of 15 to 9, ending a four-month stalemate for this crypto market structure bill. The key was two Democratic Senators, Ruben Gallego and Angela Alsobrooks, crossing party lines to vote in favor, allowing the bill to advance to the next stage. It now must be merged with the Agriculture Committee's version before being sent to the full Senate.

Following the news, the crypto market surged. Bitcoin climbed to $81,500, up about 3%. Coinbase's stock price soared over 8% intraday, MicroStrategy rose 7%, Galaxy Digital gained over 6%, and Circle, which had been down 6%, turned positive. On the same day, the S&P 500 index broke above 7,500 points for the first time, but crypto-related stocks significantly outperformed the broader market.

Core of the Bill: Ending the SEC and CFTC Jurisdiction Dispute

The CLARITY Act is considered the most important legislative goal for the crypto industry in Washington, D.C. Its core purpose is to end the long-standing gray area in jurisdictional authority over digital assets between the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), a space that has left the crypto industry struggling to operate with unclear rules for years.

Specifically, the bill will clearly define which digital assets are commodities and which are securities, and set obligations for exchanges, brokers, and custodians. The bill also protects "non-custodial" software developers and blockchain validators from being classified as "money transmitters."

In the U.S., once classified as a money transmitter, entities are typically subject to obligations like FinCEN registration, anti-money laundering measures, transaction record-keeping, and suspicious activity reporting, with some activities possibly requiring state-level licenses. The controversy lies in the fact that non-custodial software developers do not actually hold or control user funds but could be drawn into money transmitter liability due to certain legal cases. The CLARITY Act aims to distinguish centralized financial intermediaries from developers merely providing code, drawing clearer legal boundaries for non-custodial activities.

Asheesh Birla, CEO of Evernorth, stated: "For years, U.S. blockchain entrepreneurs have been operating in regulatory purgatory. Regulatory clarity can unlock capital flows. Institutions that have been watching this space from the sidelines are now one step closer to having a framework to act upon." Mari Tomunen, General Counsel at DoubleZero, highlighted the pain points in the non-custodial space: "Existing guidance suggests non-custodial activities should not inherently pose legal risks as money transmission, but some legal theories and court rulings point in the opposite direction. The CLARITY Act will help establish clearer statutory boundaries for decentralized and non-custodial activities."

Cathy Yoon, General Counsel at Harmonic, believes this legislation symbolizes a shift in congressional attitude: "Moving from consideration to a full Senate floor vote symbolizes a growing recognition that not every crypto participant is playing the role of a financial intermediary. Thoughtful legislation can set rules for custodians and centralized participants while preserving space for validators, open networks, and software developers."

Dramatic Last-Minute Reversal

However, the deliberation process was not smooth. The entire morning session was shrouded in a partisan atmosphere, with intense debates over various amendments. The turning point came while senators were still debating, when Republican Chairman Tim Scott agreed to incorporate several amendments he had previously rejected, in an effort to persuade some Democratic senators to switch their support. These additional amendments covered three main areas: strengthening investor protection, clarifying the scope of crypto-related businesses banks can engage in, and defining what constitutes a "truly decentralized" DeFi project.

The last item was a long-standing issue championed by Democratic Senator Mark Warner, who advocated for stricter safeguards for DeFi. Notably, these additional amendments gained rare broad bipartisan support, in stark contrast to the earlier split along party lines for most amendments.

Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren strongly protested the process, criticizing these amendments as "inadequate compromises." She ultimately voted against the bill, calling it "not ready," and argued the Senate has more urgent priorities than crypto industry legislation.

After the bill's passage, Scott told the committee members: "This is one of the most enlightening and also most challenging processes I've been through as a U.S. Senator. The number of hours you have spent talking to each other and learning about one another is incredible." He expressed confidence that both parties would continue to work together to resolve remaining issues.

Notably, the defections of Senators Ruben Gallego and Angela Alsobrooks were key to today's passage. Both were deeply involved in the bipartisan negotiations on the bill.

However, they also clearly stated that a committee vote does not guarantee support on the full Senate floor. Alsobrooks emphasized: "My vote today is a vote to continue negotiating in good faith. We still have a lot of work to do." She explicitly stated she would not extend this support in a full Senate vote if current concerns are not addressed. Gallego also said his final vote would depend on subsequent developments.

These statements foreshadow the real challenges ahead for the bill.

Two Major Hurdles: Ethics Provisions and the 60-Vote Threshold

Despite today's smooth passage, the bill faces significant obstacles before reaching President Trump's desk for signature.

The first hurdle is the government official conflict-of-interest provisions. Democrats have set these provisions as a condition for supporting a full Senate vote, requiring restrictions on financial ties between senior government officials and crypto companies. However, this review did not include those provisions. Democratic Senator Kirsten Gillibrand has repeatedly stated clearly that without these provisions, the bill cannot secure the 60 votes needed to pass the full Senate.

The White House has taken a firm stance on this. White House advisor Patrick Witt stated earlier this month at Consensus Miami 2026 that any provisions "specifically targeting the President" would be unacceptable. The deep involvement of Trump himself and his family in the crypto industry makes this issue particularly sensitive, leaving little room for bipartisan compromise on this matter.

The second hurdle is the Senate's 60-vote threshold. Currently, Republicans hold only 53 seats in the Senate, meaning at least 7 Democratic senators' support is needed. However, those votes are precisely tied to the ethics provisions Republicans are resisting, creating a legislative deadlock.

Regarding this deadlock, Cody Carbone, head of the crypto industry lobbying group Digital Chamber, analyzed for CoinDesk that a bipartisan agreement on the ethics provisions will likely be negotiated before the bill is scheduled for a full Senate vote. He explained: "They will only bring the bill to the floor for a vote when they are confident they have the 60 votes." Simply put, the Senate Majority Leader will not risk scheduling a bill that might fail; it's basic political rules.

Therefore, the industry generally expects the final version of the ethics provisions to be determined through behind-the-scenes negotiations first. By the time the bill actually reaches the Senate floor, all key disputes should be settled. Carbone further pointed out that the entire process must be completed before the August congressional recess, or the bill risks missing this year's legislative window. This timeline aligns with the recent assessment of Democratic Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, who also believes the chances of passing the bill this year would significantly decrease if it cannot advance before the summer recess.

Additionally, concerns about financial crime remain a worry for the bill. Beyond the ethics provisions, some Democratic senators remain concerned about whether the bill can effectively prevent crypto and DeFi technologies from being used for financial crimes. Law enforcement-related provisions are also a key issue that must be resolved in subsequent negotiations; otherwise, securing sufficient Democratic support will be difficult.

Traditional Finance's Last-Minute Push Fails

Also, in the week before the vote, the U.S. banking industry mobilized strongly against the CLARITY Act. The American Bankers Association (ABA) sent over 8,000 letters to Senate offices, warning that the bill's "stablecoin yield" provisions could lead to a massive outflow of deposits from traditional banks to the crypto industry.

The final version of the bill adopted a compromise reached in early May this year by Senator Thom Tillis (Republican) and Senator Angela Alsobrooks (Democrat): prohibiting stablecoin companies from paying passive interest akin to savings accounts (i.e., interest earned simply by holding funds) but allowing "use-based" rewards (e.g., users can receive rewards for activities like trading, transferring, or staking).

When this compromise was announced on May 4th, Circle's stock price surged nearly 20% in a single day, showing the market's reaction. The banking industry believes this compromise is too favorable to stablecoin companies. Traditional banks worry that even with passive interest banned, the gray area of "use-based rewards" could still attract a large outflow of deposits, especially from younger generations and tech-savvy users.

In a report in early May, Bank of America analyst Ebrahim H. Poonawala, while believing the overall compromise was a "net positive for banking" as it alleviated regulatory uncertainty, the ABA clearly did not share this optimistic assessment, leading to the large-scale mobilization on the eve of the vote.

From today's vote result and market reaction, the banking industry's last-minute lobbying offensive did not succeed. The bill passed smoothly 15 to 9, with the stablecoin-related provisions remaining unchanged, leading to Circle's stock price turning positive on the voting day, reflecting the market's view that the stablecoin industry held its ground in this legislative battle.

Miss August, Wait Until 2030

The crypto industry, of course, expressed high praise for this vote. Summer Mersinger, CEO of the Blockchain Association, called it a "decisive moment" and stated in a release: "Digital asset policy must be built on a bipartisan foundation. Today's vote reflects the growing bipartisan recognition that the United States needs clear rules of the road." She also noted the bill would help provide consumers with access to compliant and innovative financial products, benefiting consumers and reducing American users' reliance on offshore platforms.

However, the process ahead is quite complex. First, the version passed by the Banking Committee must be merged with the version passed along party lines by the Senate Agriculture Committee in January. The consolidated bill will then be sent to the full Senate for a vote, requiring 60 votes to pass.

After passing, the bill must go to the House of Representatives for another vote. The House already passed a similar version in July 2025 by a wide margin of 294 to 134, so House support is relatively more assured. If the final versions from both chambers are consistent and legislation is completed, the SEC, CFTC, and Treasury Department will be authorized to begin drafting implementation rules.

It's estimated the entire rulemaking process will extend into 2027, with most compliance deadlines expected between 2027 and 2028. In other words, even if the bill successfully passes Congress this summer, the crypto industry will likely not operate under the new regulatory framework until 2027 or later.

There's also another time pressure: If they miss August this time, they might have to wait until 2030.

"Successful passage through Congress" itself is an unknown, as the Senate's legislative calendar is tight, with the summer recess and midterm elections approaching, creating immense time pressure for advancing the bill. Republican Senators Cynthia Lummis and Bernie Moreno have publicly warned that if the bill cannot advance before the August congressional recess, the next feasible legislative window might not come until 2030. This means if they miss this summer's opportunity, the crypto industry may have to wait several more years for substantial legislative progress.

Perhaps for U.S. crypto operators who have been stuck in "regulatory purgatory" for years, today's 15-to-9 vote represents the most critical milestone on this long legislative road. But ahead lies a tough race against time.

Связанные с этим вопросы

QWhat was the key outcome of the Senate Banking Committee vote on the CLARITY Act, and what were its immediate market impacts?

AThe Senate Banking Committee passed the CLARITY Act with a bipartisan vote of 15 to 9, ending a four-month stalemate. This triggered a significant rally in the crypto market: Bitcoin rose approximately 3% to $81,500, Coinbase's stock surged over 8%, and other crypto-related stocks like Strategy and Galaxy Digital also saw substantial gains. Stablecoin issuer Circle's stock also reversed earlier losses.

QWhat is the core objective of the CLARITY Act regarding US regulatory bodies and digital assets?

AThe core objective of the CLARITY Act is to end the longstanding jurisdictional ambiguity between the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) over digital assets. It aims to clearly define which assets are commodities and which are securities, and to establish rules for exchanges, brokers, and custodians.

QWhat are the two major remaining obstacles for the CLARITY Act to become law, as highlighted in the article?

AThe two major remaining obstacles are: 1) The ethics clause, which Democrats require to limit financial ties between senior government officials and crypto companies, a provision the White House strongly opposes. 2) The Senate's 60-vote threshold for passage. Republicans hold only 53 seats, making bipartisan support essential, which is currently tied to the unresolved ethics clause, creating a legislative impasse.

QHow did the last-minute lobbying effort by the American Bankers Association (ABA) against the stablecoin provision conclude, and what was the final compromise?

AThe ABA's last-minute lobbying effort, involving over 8,000 letters warning of deposit outflows, did not succeed in changing the bill. The final compromise on stablecoin rewards, brokered by Senators Thom Tillis and Angela Alsobrooks, prohibits passive interest payments (like savings accounts) but allows 'usage-based' rewards for activities like transactions, transfers, or staking.

QWhat is the critical legislative timeline pressure mentioned for the CLARITY Act, and what is the consequence of missing it?

AThe article states the Act faces a critical deadline before the Congressional summer recess in August. If it fails to advance by then, the next viable legislative window might not occur until 2030. This means missing the summer opportunity could delay substantial legislative progress for the US crypto industry for several more years.

Похожее

Seeking Alpha's Hot Article: Why Might the U.S. Stock Market Crash in June?

In a recent Seeking Alpha article, financial professor and analyst Damir Tokic argues that the US stock market may be poised for a significant crash in June 2026. The core thesis centers on a "mega-bubble" in equities, particularly within the technology sector, which has driven the S&P 500 to near-record valuations, with a Shiller P/E ratio exceeding 40—a level comparable to the 2000 dot-com bubble. Tokic identifies two primary catalysts for a potential collapse. First, he points to unsustainable market exuberance fueled by what he terms the "Trump Stimulus"—massive AI capital expenditure by tech giants, which he believes is politically driven and cannot last. Second, and more urgently, he highlights the escalating Iran war as a critical threat. The ongoing closure of the Strait of Hormuz has created a severe global energy supply crunch. Strategic petroleum reserves are projected to hit critically low operational levels by June, potentially causing oil prices to spike above $200 per barrel and triggering a severe, supply-driven inflationary shock. This scenario, Tokic warns, would force the Federal Reserve's hand. Despite currently maintaining a dovish bias, the Fed would likely be compelled to officially pivot to a hawkish stance at its June FOMC meeting to combat soaring inflation and bond yields. He contends that such a shift—or even a failure to act, which would destroy Fed credibility—could be the trigger that punctures the market bubble. The resulting downturn, he concludes, could rival the bear markets of 2000 and 2008, advising investors to prepare for a major correction.

marsbit13 мин. назад

Seeking Alpha's Hot Article: Why Might the U.S. Stock Market Crash in June?

marsbit13 мин. назад

AI PC Battle: Bet on the Toll Booth, Not the Camp

**Title:** The AI PC Battle: Don't Bet on Sides, Bet on the Tollbooth **Summary:** The AI PC competition is moving beyond simple "x86 vs. Arm" narratives. The core investment thesis should focus on identifying which players can sustain margins, cash flow, and pricing power throughout the upgrade cycle, rather than backing a particular architecture. The opportunity is analyzed in three layers: 1. **The Advanced Foundry Tollbooth:** TSMC is positioned to collect "tolls" regardless of which chip designer wins, due to its dominant ~70% share in advanced semiconductor manufacturing, which is essential for high-end AI PC chips. 2. **Compute & Platform Spillover:** AMD represents an offensive in the x86 CPU+GPU space, while NVIDIA leverages its GPU and CUDA software stack dominance. Both benefit from the demand for increased local AI compute. 3. **Architecture Diffusion & Turnaround Plays:** ARM and Intel offer potential for significant upside (elasticity), but investments here require stricter discipline due to higher execution risks and competitive challenges. The industry is transitioning from concept to shipment validation. While short-term forecasts for AI PC adoption have been revised down slightly due to tariffs and procurement delays, the long-term trend towards AI becoming a standard PC feature remains intact. The key driver for upgrade cycles will be whether compelling enterprise applications (e.g., privacy-sensitive computing, low-latency inference) emerge beyond consumer-focused features like meeting summarization. Investment strategy should prioritize companies with platform-level advantages and recurring revenue streams. TSMC offers high certainty as the foundational tollbooth. AMD presents a strong offensive play within the established ecosystem. ARM and Intel are higher-risk, higher-potential-reward turnaround bets. The report cautions against chasing short-term hype and emphasizes a disciplined, long-term approach focused on buying ecosystem strength and cash-flow certainty after market enthusiasm subsides. **Key Risks:** Underwhelming AI PC applications slowing upgrade cycles; slow improvement in Windows on Arm compatibility; macro/tariff impacts on PC demand; potential advanced node supply-demand mismatches affecting TSMC; high overall AI sector valuations making stocks vulnerable to a risk-off shift in markets.

marsbit28 мин. назад

AI PC Battle: Bet on the Toll Booth, Not the Camp

marsbit28 мин. назад

Ten-Thousand-Word Analysis: From $10 to $290, MRVL Wins the Entire AI Era by 'Not Making GPUs'

Marvell Technology's stock price surged from under $10 in 2016 to a record $290 in June 2026, fueled not by making GPUs, but by dominating AI infrastructure connectivity. This analysis argues the market misvalues MRVL as merely a smaller Broadcom in custom AI chips, overlooking its true, unique position. Marvell's core strength lies in enabling high-speed data flow for AI clusters through three interconnected businesses. First, it holds a commanding ~70% market share in high-speed optical DSPs (essential for data center light modules), a deep-moat business with accelerating growth. Second, its custom AI chip design business serves hyperscalers like AWS, Microsoft, and Google, with a significant revenue pipeline despite lower margins. Third, stable cash flows come from Ethernet switch chips and enterprise storage controllers. Together, they form a full-stack "AI data movement" platform. CEO Matt Murphy's transformative leadership since 2016, involving strategic divestments, key acquisitions (like Inphi for optical DSPs), and securing long-term agreements with major cloud providers, repositioned the company. A pivotal $2 billion strategic investment from NVIDIA in 2026 underscored Marvell's critical role in the AI ecosystem, particularly through collaborations like NVLink Fusion. While Marvell faces risks—including client concentration (losing the Amazon Trainium3 design), lower-margin business mix, competitive threats, insider selling, and complex supply chains—its fundamentals remain strong. The optical interconnect moat is widening with the acquisition of Celestial AI (photonics fabric), and financial metrics show accelerating revenue growth and operating leverage. With a PEG ratio suggesting undervaluation relative to its growth, the thesis is that the market undervalues Marvell's monopolistic position in AI "plumbing" while overemphasizing its competitive custom chip segment. The story transcends investing, symbolizing how in any complex system—from the internet to AI—the value of "connection" ultimately surpasses that of individual "nodes."

marsbit57 мин. назад

Ten-Thousand-Word Analysis: From $10 to $290, MRVL Wins the Entire AI Era by 'Not Making GPUs'

marsbit57 мин. назад

AI Relay Stations Spark Heated Debate on Zhihu: Behind Cheap Tokens, What Are Users Really Worried About?

A discussion on Zhihu about "AI relay stations" shifted the niche developer topic of "cheap tokens" into broader user awareness. Users moved beyond simply questioning the legitimacy of these services to focus on practical concerns: Where do cheap tokens truly come from? Is the model being accessed the real one? Can relay stations see prompts, code, and API keys? For occasional users, are the risks worth it? The core debate centered less on price and more on trust. A primary worry is model authenticity—the risk of "model swapping," where users paying for a premium model might be routed to a cheaper one, creating an information asymmetry. Others argued that cost comparisons matter; while cheaper than official pay-as-you-go APIs, relay stations may not be the lowest-cost option versus subscriptions, domestic models, or free tiers, making user needs assessment crucial. Speculation about token sources ranged from legitimate bulk discounts to gray-area methods like account sharing or exploiting regional pricing. This opacity makes risk assessment difficult for users. Data security emerged as a critical concern, especially for enterprise use. When processing sensitive information like code, contracts, or client data, the inability to verify a relay station's data handling, retention, or access policies poses significant compliance and confidentiality risks. The evolving consensus suggests relay stations can be used cautiously for low-sensitivity, disposable tasks (e.g., summarizing public info, simple translation). However, they should not be the default for sensitive, professional, or production workflows involving proprietary data, Agents, or automated systems. Recommendations include avoiding large prepayments, not relying on a single service, using test prompts to monitor quality, anonymizing data where possible, and keeping official channels as backups. Ultimately, the discussion framed tokens not just as a billing unit but as a measure of real cost encompassing price, model integrity, data security, and service stability. The popularity of relay stations highlights user demand for affordable access, but the debate underscores a key trade-off: the savings from cheap tokens may come at the price of trust, transparency, and control over one's data and AI experience.

marsbit1 ч. назад

AI Relay Stations Spark Heated Debate on Zhihu: Behind Cheap Tokens, What Are Users Really Worried About?

marsbit1 ч. назад

Торговля

Спот
Фьючерсы
活动图片