Close Menu
Crypto Valley Journal
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Crypto Valley Journal
    • Hot Topics
      • News
      • Minds
    • Focus
      • Background
      • Blockchain
      • Legal & Compliance
      • Non-Fungible Token (NFTs)
    • Investing
      • Markets
      • Financial Products
      • Decentralized Finance (DeFi)
      • Exchange overview
    • Education
      • Basics
      • Glossary
      • Politicians on crypto
    • Statistics
      • Bitcoin-ETF-Flows
      • Ethereum-ETF-Flows
      • Crypto market data
      • On-chain data
    • Academy
      • Overview
      • Part 1: Blockchain
      • Part 2: Money
      • Part 3: Bitcoin
      • Part 4: Cryptocurrencies
      • Part 5: Decentralized Finance
      • Part 6: Investing
    • English
      • Deutsch
    Crypto Valley Journal
    You are at:Home » Focus » Legal & Compliance » Clarity Act: Banking lobby blocks the most important crypto law in the US
    The Clarity Act is stuck in the US Senate as a dispute over stablecoin interest blocks the most important crypto law in US history.

    Clarity Act: Banking lobby blocks the most important crypto law in the US

    By Editorial Office CVJ.CH on 17. March 2026 Legal & Compliance

    The Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, the most important crypto regulatory law in US history, is stuck in the Senate. In July 2025, the House of Representatives passed the bill with a broad majority of 294 to 134 votes. But in the Senate, a dispute over stablecoin interest payments has blocked progress for months.

    The Clarity Act would establish clear rules for the first time on which digital assets fall under the SEC and which under the CFTC. Specifically, the CFTC would receive exclusive jurisdiction over spot markets for so-called "Digital Commodities." Meanwhile, the SEC would remain responsible for assets classified as "Investment Contract Assets." This split would end years of regulatory uncertainty. Until now, many crypto companies simply did not know which agency had jurisdiction over them.

    Subscribe to our newsletter

    The best articles of the week, directly delivered into your mailbox.

    Stablecoin interest as the centralpoint of contention

    On January 14, 2026, the Senate Banking Committee postponed its planned Clarity Act markup on short notice. Over 100 amendments were on the table. At its core, the dispute centers on whether stablecoin issuers or crypto platforms should be allowed to pay interest on stablecoin balances to their users.

    The American Bankers Association (ABA) demands a strict ban. In their view, interest-bearing stablecoins would function as shadow savings accounts and drain deposits from the banking system. Yet the crypto industry pushes back. At minimum, transaction-based rewards should remain permitted.

    A compromise proposal would ban interest on idle stablecoin balances but allow transaction-based rewards. Still, the ABA formally rejected the White House-brokered compromise draft on March 5, 2026. As a result, negotiations continue.

    Two committees, one law: the Clarity Act in the senate

    The legislative process in the Senate is unusually complex. Two committees are working on separate drafts in parallel. On January 29, 2026, the Senate Agriculture Committee passed its text by a vote of 12 to 11. That vote fell along party lines. However, the Senate Banking Committee has not yet held its markup.

    Both drafts must be merged before a full Senate vote. Only then does reconciliation with the House text follow. Senator John Boozman, chair of the Agriculture Committee, is pushing for speed:

    "After months of work, we are trying to make significant progress. Now it is time to move this process forward." - John Boozman, Senator (R-AR)

    At the same time, Democratic support remains absent. Republicans need votes from across the aisle for a full Senate vote. Yet Democrats demand conflict-of-interest rules for politicians with crypto holdings. Public Citizen calls the bill the "Gryfto Bill," alluding to Trump's crypto investments through World Liberty Financial and the TRUMP memecoin.

    Ray Dalio’s Bridgewater Associates Minds

    Star investor Ray Dalio considers Bitcoin inferior to gold

    18 percent hold crypto assets in Switzerland, an IFZ and LUKB study shows. Banks see potential for up to 1 million advisory clients. Background

    HSLU and LUKB study: 18% of the Swiss population hold crypto assets

    Robinhood Perpetual Futures in Europe now cover commodities and currencies, and the broker plans a crypto launch in the United Kingdom. Financial Products

    Robinhood Perpetual Futures expand to commodities in Europe

    Digital finance transparency relies on Proof of Reserves, Merkle trees, MPC custody and 24/7 monitoring to verify solvency and user assets. Basics

    Transparency as the foundation of security in digital finance

    Ray Dalio’s Bridgewater Associates Minds

    Star investor Ray Dalio considers Bitcoin inferior to gold

    18 percent hold crypto assets in Switzerland, an IFZ and LUKB study shows. Banks see potential for up to 1 million advisory clients. Background

    HSLU and LUKB study: 18% of the Swiss population hold crypto assets

    GENIUS Act as a precedent

    The Clarity Act is not the only crypto law in play. Trump signed the GENIUS Act, a separate stablecoin regulatory law, on July 18, 2025. This law prohibits stablecoin issuers from paying interest or yields directly to users.

    On February 25, 2026, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) published a regulatory proposal for implementation. The agency signaled tighter limits on stablecoin rewards than expected. Consequently, this strengthens the banking lobby's negotiating position in the Clarity Act process. If implementation rules for the GENIUS Act turn out restrictive, a more liberal approach becomes harder to push through. The comment period for the OCC proposal runs until May 1, 2026.

    In terms of content, the Clarity Act builds on the FIT21 law, which passed the House in May 2024. It goes further, though, and includes DeFi protection provisions alongside the jurisdictional split between the SEC and CFTC. Under these provisions, software developers and peer-to-peer activities receive protection. Only centralized intermediaries face compliance requirements. The guiding principle remains "control rather than code."

    Political pressure from all sides

    Trump increased pressure on the banking lobby on March 3, 2026, via Truth Social. Banks block the law, he warned, and the crypto industry will migrate to China. Meanwhile, the Fairshake Super PAC, funded by the crypto industry, has allocated $193 million for the 2026 midterm elections. Significant political capital is at stake on both sides.

    Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse estimates the probability of passage by the end of April 2026 at 80 to 90 percent. JPMorgan analysts see passage by mid-2026 as a "positive catalyst" for digital assets. Still, the situation remains fragile. Summer Mersinger, CEO of the Blockchain Association, tempers expectations:

    "These are complex negotiations with multiple stakeholders, and it takes sustained engagement to bridge significant policy differences." - Summer Mersinger, CEO Blockchain Association

    Next steps through Summer 2026

    The Senate Banking Committee targets a second markup attempt by the end of March 2026. Whether this happens depends on reaching an agreement on stablecoin interest. After a successful markup, the drafts from both Senate committees would need merging. Then comes the full Senate vote and finally reconciliation with the House text. The hardest deadline falls before August 2026. That is when midterm campaigning begins, and the window for controversial votes closes entirely. On prediction markets, odds are already declining. Polymarket traders put the probability of passage this year at 60%.

    Clarity Act signed into law in 2026?
    Yes 60% · No 40%
    View full market & trade on Polymarket
    Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Telegram WhatsApp

    About the author

    Editorial Office CVJ.CH
    • Website
    • Twitter
    • LinkedIn

    Since 2018, the editorial team at Crypto Valley Journal has been reporting from Zug - the heart of Switzerland’s Crypto Valley - on Bitcoin, cryptocurrency, blockchain, and regulatory developments in digital assets. Behind the publication’s collective editorial voice is a team of writers with backgrounds in financial markets, law, and technology.

    Related Articles

    Trump's Strategic Bitcoin Reserve is stuck in a turf war between the Treasury and Commerce departments, while its legal basis is still missing.

    Trump’s strategic Bitcoin reserve stalls in agency turf war

    Six Swiss crypto service providers secured MiCA authorization. AMINA was the world's first; Sygnum and Bitcoin Suisse followed later.

    Swiss crypto service providers secure MiCA licenses

    The Clarity Act delay is intensifying: Galaxy Research cut the odds of a 2026 signing to 50%, while Polymarket now prices them at just 39%.

    Window missed: Clarity Act faces delay until 2030

    Trump's Strategic Bitcoin Reserve is stuck in a turf war between the Treasury and Commerce departments, while its legal basis is still missing.
    7. July 2026

    Trump’s strategic Bitcoin reserve stalls in agency turf war

    Russia's Sberbank plans a crypto wallet in its apps by December 2026, once the digital asset law takes effect in September.
    6. July 2026

    Russia’s Sberbank plans crypto wallet by December

    Strategy sold 3,588 Bitcoin for 216 million USD to finance its preferred dividends for STRC & Co. - the largest sale to date.
    6. July 2026

    Strategy sells USD 216 million in Bitcoin for preferred dividends

    twitter image button instagram image button linkedin image button youtube image button

    About Crypto Valley Journal
    About Crypto Valley Journal

    On the pulse of the movement

    • Academy
    • Contact
    • Advertising
    • About us
    • Partner
    • Imprint
    • Privacy
    • Disclaimer
    Search

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.