A Reddit trader known as Serenity has criticized the proposed Digital Asset Market Structure and Investor Protection Act, or CLARITY Act, as a measure that would benefit large banks at the expense of crypto-native firms and stablecoin issuers. The critique disputes claims by Patrick Witt that the bill could unlock trillions in institutional capital and drive Bitcoin to $250,000. Serenity argues the legislation would impose stricter rules that hinder innovation in decentralized finance.
The CLARITY Act, alongside the GENIUS Act, has sparked debate in the cryptocurrency community over its potential impact on market structure. Serenity, a popular crypto influencer and Reddit trader, published an article on X framing the bill as a 'Trojan Horse for crypto, paid by banks.' This view contrasts with optimistic projections from Patrick Witt, director at the President's Council of Advisors for Digital Assets, who stated on Saturday that passage of the CLARITY Act could free up 'trillions of dollars' of institutional capital currently on the sidelines.
Serenity contends that the legislation would limit yield-bearing stablecoins and require crypto platforms to adhere to bank-like rules for holding assets. It would also place fiat on- and off-ramps largely under bank supervision, making it harder for crypto-native companies to obtain banking charters or Federal Reserve master accounts. As a result, traditional banks would retain control over settlement windows, custody, and payment rails, potentially exacerbating issues like slow ACH transfers and low retail deposit yields.
The trader highlights stricter reserve requirements for stablecoin issuers, which could reduce market liquidity and restrict the use of crypto-backed or algorithmic stablecoins over time. Banks would gain a competitive edge, as rules limiting stablecoin yields apply unevenly—exempting bank-issued tokenized deposits—while pressuring non-bank issuers to comply. This shift, according to Serenity, would give the traditional banking system greater dominance over crypto payments and custody, slowing innovation and disadvantaging startups and fintech firms.
Despite supporting dollar-pegged stablecoins with stronger reserve backing, Serenity warns that the broader regulatory framework could make the crypto market less liquid and hinder competition with established banks.