Senate Banking Committee votes on Clarity Act, favoring Bitcoin and Coinbase staking

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The Senate Banking Committee is set to mark up and vote on the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act on May 14, a sweeping 309-page bill that would create the first comprehensive regulatory framework for digital assets in the US. The legislation touches everything from Bitcoin’s treatment under federal law to whether platforms like Coinbase can continue offering staking rewards.

What the Clarity Act actually does

The legislation establishes a market structure framework that would define how different digital assets are classified and regulated. Bitcoin, stablecoins, and yield-generating products each get specific treatment under the proposed rules.

The most contentious piece is Section 404, which directly addresses stablecoins and the thorny question of yield. The provision bans stablecoin issuers from paying interest on balances in a way that mimics traditional bank deposits. In English: if you’re holding USDC or another stablecoin, the company behind it can’t just pay you interest the way a savings account would.

But there’s a carve-out. The bill does allow what it calls “activity-based rewards.” This distinction matters enormously for platforms like Coinbase, which offer staking and other yield products that generate returns through actual blockchain participation rather than traditional lending.

The banking lobby is not thrilled

Major banking trade groups, including the American Bankers Association and the Bank Policy Institute, have come out against the bill’s stablecoin provisions. Their argument is straightforward: if stablecoin platforms can offer anything resembling yield, customers will move money out of traditional bank accounts.

Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong has publicly backed the legislation, noting that it preserves essential protections for the industry even if it requires some compromises. Armstrong’s endorsement is notable because Coinbase has the most to gain, or lose, from how yield products are treated under the new framework. The company’s staking services are a growing revenue line, and a regulatory framework that explicitly permits activity-based rewards would give those products legal certainty they currently lack.

Progressive opposition and the ethics question

On the other side of the aisle, Sen. Elizabeth Warren and other progressive Democrats are threatening to block the bill unless it includes strict ethics provisions. Their concern centers on potential conflicts of interest involving President Trump, whose family has expanded its crypto-related business interests.

For the committee vote on May 14, the markup process will likely involve multiple amendment proposals. Progressive members are expected to push ethics-related amendments, while industry-aligned senators may try to soften the stablecoin yield restrictions further.

What this means for investors

The risk is in the details. A 309-page bill with active amendments from both progressive and banking-aligned senators could change substantially before reaching a floor vote. The Section 404 compromise on stablecoin yield is already a fragile balance between what banks want and what the crypto industry needs. Any shift in that language could meaningfully alter the competitive landscape for stablecoin issuers and the platforms that distribute their products.

The bill also faces the essential threshold of 60 votes needed to pass in the Senate, and the ABA and BPI’s opposition to the stablecoin provisions suggests this bill faces a tougher path to the Senate floor than the committee vote alone would indicate.

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