Coinbase CEO predicts global Bitcoin legalization after US market structure passage

1 hour ago 1



Brian Armstrong thinks the US is about to do something that changes the game for every other major economy on the planet. The Coinbase CEO is betting that once American lawmakers pass comprehensive crypto market-structure legislation, the rest of the world’s governments will fall in line and legalize Bitcoin.

The domino theory of crypto regulation

Armstrong has positioned US regulatory clarity as the single most important catalyst for global crypto adoption. He specifically described US regulatory clarity as a “bellwether for the G20.” Whatever framework Congress puts in place will become the template that finance ministries in London, Tokyo, Berlin, and beyond use to draft their own rules.

A single, coherent market-structure bill would replace the current patchwork of enforcement actions, agency turf wars, and court battles with something the rest of the world can actually respond to.

What’s actually on the table in Congress

The legislative discussions Armstrong is referencing center on the Clarity Act and related negotiations happening on Capitol Hill. Among the key provisions under discussion are stablecoin rewards and protections for software developers.

Armstrong acknowledged that the process has involved compromises. He noted concessions made to satisfy the demands of the bank lobby and Senate negotiators regarding stablecoin activity.

Why Coinbase cares about more than just trading

Coinbase views clear regulation as the key that unlocks expansion into payments, tokenization, and prediction markets. Armstrong has separately expressed a long-term bullish outlook on Bitcoin, predicting it could reach $1 million by 2030. He cites Bitcoin’s fixed supply and rising demand as the fundamental drivers. Regulatory clarity, in his view, would accelerate that demand curve by removing the legal uncertainty that keeps institutional capital and sovereign wealth funds on the sidelines.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

Read Entire Article