Crypto Titans Unite: 100+ Firms Pressure Senate on Clarity Act, Warn of Exodus!

Published 10 hours ago3 minute read
David Isong
David Isong
Crypto Titans Unite: 100+ Firms Pressure Senate on Clarity Act, Warn of Exodus!

A unified group of more than 100 cryptocurrency companies and trade organizations on April 23, 2026sent a formal letter to the Senate Banking Committee.

The coalition is urging Senators Tim Scott (R-S.C.),Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Cynthia Lummis (R-Wyo.), and Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz.)to move forward with a "markup" for the Digital Asset Market CLARITY Act.

The group argues that the United States cannot continue to rely on government agencies alone to set policy.

They noted that the current method of "regulation by enforcement", where the SEC and CFTC define rules through individual lawsuits, has created a fragmented and unstable environment for American businesses.

The Digital Asset Market CLARITY Act is designed to draw a statutory line between digital commodities and investment contract assets.

By creating this legal distinction, the bill provides clarity on the specific oversight responsibilities for the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).

While the bill has already cleared the House of Representatives, it has faced multiple delays at the Senate level.

Source: Google

These setbacks have occurred as crypto leaders and banking giants struggle to reach a compromise on certain clauses.

The most significant point of conflict remains whether yields on stablecoins should be allowed, a provision that has divided traditional lenders and digital asset firms.

Industry leaders are sounding alarms that the U.S. is rapidly falling behind other global jurisdictions that have already implemented comprehensive crypto frameworks.

They point to examples like the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation, which has successfully provided legal certainty across its member states, thereby positioning the EU as a competitive hub for digital asset innovation.

Ji Hun Kim, chief executive of the Crypto Council for Innovation, underscored this urgency, stating that the U.S. is at a "critical moment" in shaping the future of financial technology and that existing bipartisan groundwork, including efforts like the GENIUS Act on stablecoins, offers a solid foundation for broader legislation.

Source: Disruption Banking

The imperative for legislative action was further echoed by U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent during a recent hearing on Donald Trump’s FY2027 budget.

Bessent urged the Senate to pass the legislation, asserting its critical role in preserving U.S. financial leadership and the dollar’s global reserve status.

He framed digital assets as both an economic and national security priority, highlighting the need for enhanced regulatory clarity and robust oversight frameworks, including Anti-Money Laundering (AML) and Know Your Customer (KYC) protocols. Bessent also warned that the existing unclear U.S. rules are already pushing crypto innovation abroad.

Despite the persistent calls and the clear sense of urgency from the industry and government officials, the Senate Banking Committee has yet to schedule a markup of the Clarity Act.

The delay leaves the digital asset industry in a state of uncertainty as lawmakers continue to debate and negotiate the intricacies of federal crypto oversight.

Multiple competing bills, such as the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act and the Digital Commodity Intermediaries Act, still require reconciliation before any significant progress can be made, though Bessent expressed confidence that bipartisan agreement remains achievable.

Loading...
Loading...
Loading...

You may also like...