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#ClarityActLatestDraft
The latest draft of the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act is creating waves in the U.S. crypto industry. This week Senate insiders saw the updated language around stablecoin yield for the first time and it immediately rattled markets.
The CLARITY Act aims to define digital commodities versus investment contract assets create federal registration pathways for exchanges brokers custodians and token issuers and remove the regulatory vacuum between the SEC and CFTC. It is designed to bring the digital asset ecosystem under a coherent federal framework.
The biggest news this week is the stablecoin yield clause. Passive rewards for simply holding stablecoins are banned and any program resembling bank deposit interest is prohibited. Rewards tied to specific user activities may be allowed but regulators have one year to define what qualifies as activity based. This compromise was largely driven by banking industry pressure and leaves crypto insiders frustrated over vagueness and scope.
Markets responded sharply. Circle lost as much as 20 percent wiping roughly 5.6 billion dollars in market cap overnight and Coinbase dropped approximately 8 to 10 percent. Tether announced it hired a Big Four firm for a full reserve audit highlighting the growing attention on stablecoin compliance.
Three major sticking points remain. DeFi oversight language is still unresolved with anti money laundering and illicit finance protections under negotiation. Democrats are pushing for a government officials profit ban clause targeting senior officials with crypto business interests. And the activity based yield definition remains unclear leaving platforms uncertain about what products they can safely offer.
If passed the CLARITY Act would represent the full arrival of digital assets into the U.S. financial system potentially unlocking institutional investment and regulatory certainty. But the stablecoin yield restrictions and remaining political and DeFi negotiations mean the path forward is still complex.
The next critical milestone is scheduling a Senate Banking Committee hearing and resolving DeFi rules and the political accountability clause before the bill can reach a full vote. The draft highlights both the promise of clarity and the friction that comes with balancing innovation regulation and political oversight.