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: Coinbase continues to block the bill
    Coinbase blocks the CLARITY Act again - stablecoin yield provisions threaten the crypto exchange's $1.35 billion USDC business.

    CLARITY Act: Coinbase continues to block the bill

    By Editorial Office CVJ.CH on 26. March 2026 Legal & Compliance

    Coinbase has once again refused to back the CLARITY Act in the US Senate. The company rejects the updated stablecoin yield provisions, which would ban passive returns on stablecoin holdings.

    On March 25, Coinbase informed Senate staff that it cannot support the current version of the bill. The company expressed "significant concerns" about the yield provisions in the draft legislation. In January, Coinbase had already rejected an earlier draft, derailing the planned vote in the Senate Banking Committee. As a result, the largest publicly traded crypto exchange in the US is jeopardizing the central crypto market structure bill for a second time within three months.

    Subscribe to our newsletter

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

    Billion-dollar USDC business at the center of the conflict

    Behind Coinbase's resistance lies a concrete financial interest. The company generated approximately $1.35 billion in stablecoin revenue in 2025. In the third quarter alone, $355 million flowed from this business segment. Moreover, the bulk of that revenue stems from a distribution agreement with Circle, the issuer of the USDC stablecoin.

    The structure of this agreement makes Coinbase's position understandable. For USDC held directly on the Coinbase platform, the exchange receives 100 percent of reserve income. When USDC is held outside the platform, Circle and Coinbase split the proceeds equally. In 2024, Circle paid a total of $908 million to Coinbase, out of total distribution costs of $1.01 billion. Coinbase now holds roughly 20 to 22 percent of total USDC in circulation, up from 5 percent in 2022.

    A ban on passive stablecoin yields would directly undermine this business model. The reserve income depends on interest earned from USDC reserves. Therefore, Coinbase's rejection is driven by economics rather than ideology.

    Tillis-Alsobrooks compromise fails due to Coinbase

    Senators Thom Tillis (Republican) and Angela Alsobrooks (Democrat) presented a stablecoin yield compromise on March 10. On March 20, both confirmed a preliminary agreement, supported by the White House. In addition, the industry considered the issue "99 percent resolved."

    The compromise distinguishes between passive and active returns. Passive yields for simply holding a stablecoin would fall under the ban. Activity-based rewards, such as those for payments or transactions, would remain allowed. Banking lobbyists had pushed for precisely this distinction because passive stablecoin yields could draw deposits away from the traditional banking system.

    Notably, Coinbase is increasingly isolated with this stance. Other major industry players such as Ripple, Andreessen Horowitz, and Kraken support the bill. Senator Cynthia Lummis actively advocated for the protection of stablecoin rewards. However, the bipartisan compromise found broad support. CEO Brian Armstrong made the company's position unmistakably clear in January: no bill at all is preferable to one that restricts stablecoin yields.

    Ray Dalio’s Bridgewater Associates Minds

    Star investor Ray Dalio considers Bitcoin inferior to gold

    Tokenization opens up new ways for companies to engage investors flexibly and structure financing efficiently. Background

    Tokenized equity shares: a tax-efficient alternative to traditional equity?

    Hyperliquid ETFs post record daily inflows of 25.5 million USD. HYPE token gains double digits and beats Bitcoin on a market-adjusted basis. Financial Products

    HYPE all-time high: Hyperliquid ETFs post record inflow of 25 million USD

    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

    Tokenization opens up new ways for companies to engage investors flexibly and structure financing efficiently. Background

    Tokenized equity shares: a tax-efficient alternative to traditional equity?

    Second blockade in three months

    Coinbase had already rejected the earlier CLARITY Act draft in January. Consequently, the markup in the Senate Banking Committee, scheduled for January 16, did not take place. Negotiations stalled for weeks. The CLARITY Act aims to create a federal framework for cryptocurrencies in the US. Furthermore, it would formally divide oversight between the SEC and the CFTC. The House of Representatives passed its version in July 2025. In the Senate, progress has stalled since then.

    Beyond the stablecoin yield debate, additional conflicts weigh on the negotiations. Democrats demand ethics provisions that would bar politicians from profiting on crypto engagements. Republicans reject these measures. At the same time, the Senate negotiates an amendment to the GENIUS Act on stablecoin regulation. Its yield provisions touch on the same fundamental debate. The window is closing. After the Easter recess, which ends on April 13, a Senate Banking Committee markup is expected in the second half of April. May 2026 marks the informal deadline. After that, midterm campaign dynamics are likely to dominate the agenda.

    Coinbase is therefore playing a risky game. The company applies maximum negotiating pressure to alter the yield provisions in its favor. At the same time, it risks the CLARITY Act failing entirely. For Coinbase itself, the outcome could prove paradoxical. In the short term, a regulatory vacuum protects the existing USDC business. In the long run, however, it prevents the institutional regulatory clarity that would benefit the exchange.

    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

    UK sanctions against HTX, Exmo and 16 other entities target Russia's A7 crypto network with annual volume exceeding USD 90 billion.

    UK sanctions crypto exchange HTX and Russian A7 network

    The CLARITY Act passed the Senate Banking Committee 15 to 9. In the full Senate, seven votes are missing and the ethics dispute blocks the path.

    CLARITY Act: Senate committee approves bill, ethics dispute blocks full Senate

    The SEC delays its innovation exemption for tokenized stocks indefinitely. Third-party tokens have emerged as the central sticking point.

    SEC delays innovation exemption for tokenized stocks

    BIS and more than 40 banks present the Project Agorá prototype: cross-border payments tokenized and now in the real-money testing phase.
    28. May 2026

    Project Agorá: BIS and banks tokenize cross-border payments

    Mark Cuban sold most of his Bitcoin and now calls it a failed inflation hedge after the Iran crisis undercut his gold thesis.
    27. May 2026

    Mark Cuban sells most of his Bitcoin holdings, keeps Ethereum

    OpenZeppelin co-founder Aráoz calls all of DeFi unsafe and advises exiting. The DeFi security risk also affects Aave and Compound.
    27. May 2026

    OpenZeppelin co-founder calls all of DeFi unsafe

    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.