Clarity act markup faces ethics and stablecoin hurdles

The Senate Banking Committee plans to mark up the CLARITY Act next week, but Democratic demands for conflict-of-interest rules and banking opposition to stablecoin rewards threaten to derail the effort. Negotiators reached a compromise on stablecoin yields earlier this month, yet banks argue the language still permits evasion. A long-delayed vote on the bill, which aims to clarify digital asset oversight between the SEC and CFTC, now hangs in the balance.

Senators Thom Tillis and Angela Alsobrooks proposed language that bars crypto firms from offering rewards resembling bank interest while allowing incentives tied to platform use. The American Bankers Association contends the draft still enables exchanges to reward account balances and tenure, pulling funds from insured deposits. This opposition persists despite the compromise that revived the bill's momentum after months of delay.

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Senators debating the CLARITY Act amid stablecoin disputes in a committee hearing room.
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Senate banking committee to markup clarity act thursday amid stablecoin dispute

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The US Senate Banking Committee is scheduled to hold a markup on the CLARITY Act on May 14, with stablecoin rewards provisions remaining a key point of contention. Banking groups are pressing for tighter limits while the White House has accused industry leaders of skipping earlier negotiations.

U.S. Senators Thom Tillis and Angela Alsobrooks released compromise text Friday for the CLARITY Act, addressing stablecoin yields as the final major hurdle in the crypto market structure bill. The agreement bans yields equivalent to bank deposits but allows rewards for bona fide activities. Crypto industry leaders quickly endorsed it and urged the Senate Banking Committee to schedule a markup.

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The Senate Banking Committee will hold a markup hearing on the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act of 2025 on Thursday, May 14, at 10:30 a.m. The session comes after months of delays over stablecoin provisions and other issues.

JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon sharply criticized Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong on Friday over provisions in the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act. Dimon warned that the bill's approach to stablecoin rewards could lead to failure without stronger bank-style protections.

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