For over a decade, the U.S. cryptocurrency industry has faced crippling regulatory uncertainty, with the SEC and CFTC locked in a bureaucratic tug-of-war over jurisdiction. The CLARITY Act (Digital Asset Market Clarity Act of 2025) is Washington’s most serious attempt to resolve this conflict by writing clear regulatory rules into federal law. Passed by the House in July 2025 with strong bipartisan support, the bill recently cleared the Senate Banking Committee on May 14, 2026, marking a pivotal turning point for crypto regulation in America.
The core purpose of the CLARITY Act is to divide crypto oversight between two agencies: the SEC regulates digital assets that behave like securities (investment contracts sold by centralized teams), while the CFTC gains exclusive authority over digital commodities like Bitcoin and Ethereum that operate on decentralized networks. The legislation creates three distinct categories: digital commodities (CFTC), investment contract assets (SEC), and permitted payment stablecoins (joint oversight). This framework ends the legal vapor that has forced companies like Coinbase and Binance to spend millions on litigation instead of building products.
For crypto businesses and developers, the Act offers transformative benefits including easier compliance, reduced risk of surprise enforcement actions, and expanded innovation opportunities in payments and trading. Crucially, it provides safe harbors for DeFi developers who write open-source code without touching user funds, stopping smart contract publication from being treated as running an unlicensed money transmitter. Banks also gain a legal on-ramp for custody, settlement, and tokenized assets, transforming these from regulatory grenades into normal business lines.
However, three major fights could still derail the legislation before it reaches President Trump’s desk. First, law enforcement groups argue the bill makes illicit finance through DeFi too easy, with Senator Warner negotiating stricter provisions. Second, Senate Democrats demand ethics language preventing officials (including President Trump, who holds significant crypto holdings) from profiting from industry regulation, which the White House opposes. Third, banks panic over stablecoin rewards, with the current compromise blocking direct yield but permitting activity-linked rewards to protect traditional banking deposits.
If passed, the CLARITY Act would establish the first actual statutory framework for digital assets in the United States, written by Congress and binding on every regulator, exchange, developer, and investor. A merged Senate bill is plausible by late summer 2026, with final passage by year-end realistic if the three open conflicts resolve. For the first time since Satoshi’s Bitcoin whitepaper, crypto purgatory might finally be ending, bringing the U.S. in line with regulatory clarity already enjoyed in Singapore, Switzerland, and Dubai.
This article has been indexed from CySecurity News – Latest Information Security and Hacking Incidents
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