CLARITY Act Update: Crypto and Bank Reps Head to Capitol Hill to Review Stablecoin Deal as Details Remain Under Wraps

CLARITY Act Update: Crypto and Bank Reps Head to Capitol Hill to Review Stablecoin Deal as Details Remain Under Wraps

Crypto industry leaders are meeting with the Senate Banking Committee today, with bank representatives following tomorrow, to review the stablecoin yield compromise that unblocked the CLARITY Act last week.


 

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The stablecoin yield deal is moving to its next stage.

Eleanor Terrett reported Monday afternoon that crypto industry leaders are meeting with the Senate Banking Committee today, with bank representatives scheduled to follow on Tuesday, to review the product of the compromise reached last week between Senators Thom Tillis and Angela Alsobrooks. Details of the agreement remain under wraps.

As FinTech Weekly reported, Tillis and Alsobrooks confirmed an agreement in principle on stablecoin yield — the provision that had blocked the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act from advancing since the Banking Committee cancelled its January markup.

The deal was described by Alsobrooks as a way to protect innovation while preventing the deposit flight that banks had argued yield-bearing stablecoins would cause. Tillis said he felt the negotiations were in a good place but noted he intended to review the final text with industry stakeholders before formalising anything.


Monday's meetings are that review process beginning. The sequencing — crypto first, banks second — reflects the same dynamic that has defined the stablecoin yield negotiation from the start: the two sides must both accept the same language before a markup can be scheduled.

The Senate Banking Committee markup remains targeted for the second half of April, after Easter recess ends on April 13. Senator Cynthia Lummis confirmed that timeline. Senator Bernie Moreno has said explicitly that if the bill does not reach the full Senate floor by May, digital asset legislation may not move again before the midterm election cycle makes major votes politically untouchable.

Monday's Capitol Hill meetings do not change those deadlines. They are the next step in determining whether the language holds when both sides read it closely.

 



Editor's note: We are committed to accuracy. If you spot an error, a missing detail, or have additional information about the CLARITY Act negotiations, please email us at [email protected]. We will review and update promptly.

 

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