The Digital Asset Market Clarity Act—better known as the CLARITY Act—is back in focus this week after a major breakthrough on Capitol Hill. Senators Thom Tillis (R-NC) and Angela Alsobrooks (D-MD) announced last week that the Senate Banking Committee has reached an agreement in principle intended to unblock the long-stalled legislation.
The key sticking point that had ground progress to a halt? Stablecoin rewards. Lawmakers have been locked in debate over how to treat yield-bearing stablecoins and whether staking or lending rewards should trigger additional regulatory scrutiny. That divide has now been bridged with a bipartisan framework that both sides believe can move forward.
This is the closest Congress has come to delivering comprehensive crypto market structure legislation. The CLARITY Act aims to establish clear jurisdiction between the SEC and CFTC, define which digital assets are securities versus commodities, and create a regulatory pathway for exchanges, brokers, and custodians to operate legally in the United States.
For months, the bill languished as stablecoin policy remained unresolved. Now, with an agreement in principle, the path to passage is visible. Industry advocates see this as a pivotal moment—one that could finally end the era of regulation-by-enforcement and replace it with clear rules of the road.
The deal isn't final, but momentum is building. After years of uncertainty, American crypto policy may finally have its breakthrough.

