Comprehensive U.S. crypto legislation is advancing in Congress, with the Clarity Act poised to unlock trillions in sidelined institutional capital as lawmakers confront stablecoin regulation, SEC oversight, and CFTC authority in a high-stakes policy battle.
Federal lawmakers are continuing negotiations on comprehensive crypto legislation. Patrick Witt, Executive Director of the President’s Council of Advisors for Digital Assets, provided an update on the Clarity Act, detailing committee progress, bipartisan concerns, and efforts to resolve disputes surrounding stablecoin regulation and agency oversight.
Witt stated that regulatory certainty would unlock significant institutional participation in digital assets and strengthen U.S. market leadership. He shared on social media platform X on Feb. 13:
“There are trillions of dollars in institutional capital on the sidelines waiting to get into this space. Regulatory clarity is the unlock.”
In an interview on Yahoo Finance, he discussed efforts to pass the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, stating: “There is so much goodness in this bill, no matter what your perspective is.” Witt outlined that the House approved its version of the Clarity Act last July, while the Senate crafted its own draft, advancing the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) section through the Agriculture Committee and continuing discussions in the Banking Committee over the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) portion. A scheduled markup was postponed after senators from both parties raised concerns about potential deposit flight tied to stablecoin rewards.
Beyond the stablecoin yield debate, Witt highlighted additional sticking points involving token taxonomy, decentralized finance oversight, and ensuring the SEC does not absorb too much CFTC authority. He described the stablecoin rewards issue as a major obstacle, encouraging stakeholders to pursue a targeted solution that addresses concerns about so-called idle yield without disrupting broader business models.
Banking executives have warned that allowing yield-bearing stablecoins could pressure community bank deposits and lending, while digital asset advocates maintain that clear jurisdictional boundaries and defined compliance pathways would promote innovation, competition, and long-term stability in the crypto sector.
It is comprehensive crypto legislation designed to define SEC and CFTC oversight and regulate stablecoins.
Lawmakers worry yield-bearing stablecoins could trigger deposit flight from community banks.
Patrick Witt said trillions in institutional capital are waiting for clear crypto regulations.
The SEC and CFTC are negotiating jurisdictional boundaries under the Clarity Act.
Related Articles
JPMorgan: Bitcoin shows greater resilience as gold and silver face pressure
UBS: The Federal Reserve may delay interest rate cuts until September, then cut again in December
Opfi Investment: The Federal Reserve Faces a Dilemma in Its Dual Mandate of Employment and Inflation
Middle Eastern conflict severely impacts the global economy! OECD: U.S. inflation may surge to 4.2%, the Federal Reserve will delay interest rate cuts, and Europe may be forced to raise rates.
After the U.S. initial unemployment claims data was released, the probability of the Federal Reserve raising interest rates by 25 basis points in April is 6.2%.
Australia Central Bank Signals Support for Tokenization Adoption