In the latest on the stalled Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, former CFTC Chair Christopher Giancarlo argues banks require regulatory clarity more urgently than crypto companies for digital payments. The bill remains deadlocked over stablecoin rewards after missing a March 1 White House deadline, amid banks' fears of capital flight.
Following reports of building momentum for the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act (CLARITY Act)—which passed the House in July after the GENIUS Act established stablecoin rules—the bill faces ongoing Senate deadlock over proposals to restrict rewards on stablecoins, tokens pegged to fiat for blockchain payments.
On the Wolf Of All Streets podcast, former CFTC Chair Christopher Giancarlo stressed that "the banks need this more than crypto," noting their general counsels block major digital infrastructure investments amid uncertainty. Banks like JPMorgan, led by CEO Jamie Dimon calling for a "level playing field," fear rewards siphoning deposits from traditional accounts. Bain & Company's Ricardo Correia called rewards indirect interest skirting prohibitions.
Crypto advocates including Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong resist Senate Banking Committee bans, while the Trump administration accused banks of stalling post-Trump's missed March 1 social media deadline. Giancarlo pegs passage odds at 60-40, warning U.S. banks risk falling behind as activity shifts to Europe/Asia. Experts like Troutman Pepper Locke's Deborah Kovsky-Apap note asset classifications can evolve (e.g., company tokens becoming commodities on open markets), and President's Council advisor Patrick Witt urges balanced regulation.