Senate Reveal 309-Page Clarity Act Tonightt: Green Light Inbound?

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Ahmed Barakat

Author

Ahmed Barakat

Part of the Team Since

Aug 2025

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Ahmed Balaha is a journalist and copywriter based in Georgia with a growing focus on blockchain technology, DeFi, AI, privacy, digital assets, and fintech innovation.

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The Senate Banking Committee dropped the full 309-page text of the CLARITY Act just after midnight on Tuesday, May 11, 2026, ahead of a Thursday committee hearing that could advance the most comprehensive crypto market structure legislation the U.S. has attempted.

The headline provision: a 1:1 reserve mandate requiring all payment stablecoin issuers to hold high-quality liquid assets against every token in circulation.

The tension at the center of this bill is real; it asks stablecoin issuers, DeFi developers, institutional custodians, and traditional banks to accept a single regulatory framework that serves none of them perfectly.

The second major structural element draws a hard jurisdictional line between the SEC and CFTC, assigning oversight based on whether a token functions as a security with ongoing management-led profit expectations or as a digital commodity within a decentralized protocol.

That division has been missing from U.S. law since Bitcoin’s creation, and its absence has been the single largest barrier to institutional custody approvals at regulated fiduciaries. The bill does not resolve every gray zone, but it creates the statutory floor that compliance teams have said they need before allocation committees will act.

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What the 1:1 Reserve Mandate Actually Requires – and Who It Pressures

The CLARITY Act restricts qualifying reserve assets to short-duration U.S. Treasuries under 90 days, overnight repurchase agreements, and central bank deposits. That is a tighter composition requirement than current market practice.

Tether’s USDT reserve disclosures have historically included corporate paper, money market funds, and secured loans, none of which would qualify under this framework. Circle’s USDC, by contrast, has already shifted toward short-duration Treasuries and cash, positioning it closer to compliance than its largest competitor.

On stablecoin yield, the bill’s language is deliberately constrained. It permits interest or yield payments only when made “solely in connection with the holding of payment stablecoins” or structured to be economically equivalent to interest on a bank deposit.

Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong, whose company was at the center of that negotiation, said publicly on Monday that “not everyone got everything they wanted, but they got the must-haves.” Armstrong confirmed Coinbase is working with at least five of the largest global banks and framed the outcome as workable: “We want it to be win-win and work with the banks.”

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The American Bankers Association is not satisfied. The group escalated its lobbying over the weekend, warning senators that yield-bearing stablecoins could drain insured deposits and destabilize mortgage funding.

Source: CB on X

Research from Galaxy pushed back directly, arguing that stablecoin growth will predominantly originate offshore and that “foreign capital will flow into U.S. banking infrastructure at a rate that materially exceeds any domestic deposit migration.”

That is a contested empirical claim, but it is the framework Galaxy is asking lawmakers to adopt before Thursday’s vote on Stablecoin Regulation.

What Clarity ACT Bill Passage Means for Capital Flows, and What Stalls It

Galaxy’s research framing has direct market implications: if stablecoin growth is predominantly offshore-driven, the reserve mandate functions as an onboarding mechanism for foreign dollar demand into U.S. Treasuries, not a threat to domestic bank deposits.

That framing, if it holds in Senate debate, substantially weakens the American Bankers Association’s argument and increases the probability the yield language survives intact.

Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott called the bill “serious, good-faith work” that “puts consumers first, combats illicit finance” and “keeps the future of finance here in the United States.”

The opposition, led by ranking Democrat Elizabeth Warren, is not primarily about reserves or jurisdiction, it is about the missing ethics provision.

Warren stated that Trump and his family have “raked in at least $1.4 billion in gains from crypto deals alone” in his first year, and that “this bill stunningly includes zero provisions to prevent that.”

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The conflict-of-interest section is outside the Banking Committee’s jurisdiction and must be added later. Democrats, including Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, have said they will not allow the bill to move without it. Sixty yes votes are required for Senate passage, that number requires meaningful Democratic support, the same dynamic that institutional adoption narratives in the payment token space depend on for durable regulatory legitimacy.

The bill still needs to be merged with a version approved by the Senate Agriculture Committee, the ethics provision must be negotiated and inserted, and then 60 senators must vote yes.

White House adviser Patrick Witt has set July 4 as the administration’s target. Senator Gillibrand has predicted the first week of August.

If the committee votes Thursday and the ethics language lands in a form both parties can accept, that timeline is plausible. If the conflict-of-interest provision becomes the bill’s breaking point, the framework gets delayed, and every institutional allocation waiting on statutory classification waits with it.


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