DeFi regulation, banking concerns, and SEC–CFTC tensions complicate progress on the CLARITY Act.
Policymakers face structural crypto regulation challenges far beyond stablecoin reward restrictions.
By the time another headline declares the CLARITY Act
stalled because "crypto bros want yield," we have already lost the
plot. The narrative that stablecoin rewards alone are holding up America's
first comprehensive digital asset market structure framework is not just
incomplete.
It is dangerously reductive. I can tell you that the delays
stem from five substantive, interconnected challenges that reflect deeper
tensions about financial
architecture, technological feasibility, and political will. Reducing this to a
simple fight over yield misunderstands both the stakes and the sophistication
required for meaningful regulation.
The Stablecoin Yield Loophole
The first and perhaps most technical issue concerns the
so-called "yield loophole" in the GENIUS Act. It is true that the
GENIUS Act, signed into law in 2025, explicitly prohibits permitted payment
stablecoin issuers from paying interest or yield solely for holding a
stablecoin.
However, as banking
stakeholders have correctly identified, this prohibition does not automatically
extend to third-party intermediaries. Exchanges, wallet providers, or payment
applications may offer "rewards," "staking yields," or
other return-like incentives on idle stablecoin balances.
This is not regulatory pedantry. It is a legitimate concern
about regulatory arbitrage. If non-bank entities can replicate the economic
function of an insured deposit account without equivalent capital, liquidity,
or consumer protection safeguards, we risk creating a two-tiered financial
system where innovation becomes a vector for systemic vulnerability.
The
banking sector's push for unambiguous statutory language in the CLARITY Act is
less about stifling competition and more about ensuring functional equivalence
in risk
management.
With the total stablecoin market capitalization exceeding
$307 billion as of February 2026, the scale of potential disintermediation
demands careful calibration, not ideological reflex.
Operational Risks of Always-On Stablecoin Rails
Operational and systemic stability concerns extend far
beyond yield semantics. The 24/7 nature of crypto markets introduces liquidity
and settlement pressures that traditional banking infrastructure simply was not
designed to absorb.
Community banks, which form the backbone of American credit
allocation, lack the technological capacity to liquidate reserve assets such as
U.S. Treasuries in real time to meet instant redemption demands that could
cascade during periods of market stress.
Without parity in operational resilience, always-on stablecoin rails
could propagate shocks into the traditional payment system. This would
undermine the very stability the Act seeks to protect.
This is not hypothetical.
The DeFi Compliance Dilemma
Nowhere is the tension between regulatory intent and
technical reality more acute than in the treatment of decentralized finance.
The CLARITY Act's requirement that DeFi protocols register as financial
institutions and report transaction data fundamentally conflicts with the
architecture of permissionless code.
Industry experts, including many
open-source developers I have consulted, argue that enforcing bank-like KYC/AML
obligations on non-custodial, autonomous protocols is not only technically
infeasible but risks criminalizing the very act of publishing code.
The Act's provision granting the SEC discretion to exempt
certain DeFi activities is a step in the right direction, but it remains
insufficient without clearer safe harbors for truly decentralized systems.
🚨 BREAKING:
President Trump says that if the SAVE AMERICA ACT becomes law, Democrats could be locked out of winning a national election for the next 50 years.
He also confirmed that the CLARITY ACT would follow — a move aimed at turning the United States into the global hub… pic.twitter.com/IHwkeVasWf
— Mr. Crypto Whale 🐋 (@Mrcryptoxwhale) March 9, 2026
Ethics Provisions and Political Gridlock
Compounding these technical challenges are ethics provisions
that have become political flashpoints. Senate Democrats' introduction of
stringent conflict-of-interest clauses, widely interpreted as targeting
high-profile crypto initiatives linked to former President Trump, such as World
Liberty Financial, has intensified partisan gridlock.
While preventing public
officials from profiting off the policies they shape is unquestionably
important, weaponizing ethics rules to score political points complicates bipartisan
compromise on the bill's core regulatory framework.
At the core of these disputes is the SEC–CFTC jurisdictional
tension. Banks favor the SEC’s investor-protection mandate, while critics
question the CFTC’s capacity to oversee retail platforms. The CLARITY Act
splits authority: the CFTC handles anti-fraud and anti-manipulation in digital
commodities, and the SEC covers investment contract assets during fundraising.
While clear in theory, this risks fragmented oversight. SEC Chair Paul Atkins
calls it a way to "future-proof" rules, highlighting that ambiguity
mainly benefits bad actors.
A Framework for Digital Asset Markets
The Act’s three-category framework—digital commodities,
investment contract assets, and permitted payment stablecoins—aims to bring
order to a chaotic market. Investment contract assets are treated as securities
only during fundraising, converting to digital commodities in secondary
markets.
The CLARITY Act aims to balance innovation with protection,
but its success depends on rules that are technologically literate,
economically sound, and ethically grounded. With the stablecoin market now
larger than the GDP of many nations, today’s decisions will shape tomorrow’s
financial infrastructure and must be guided by evidence, not echo chambers.
By the time another headline declares the CLARITY Act
stalled because "crypto bros want yield," we have already lost the
plot. The narrative that stablecoin rewards alone are holding up America's
first comprehensive digital asset market structure framework is not just
incomplete.
It is dangerously reductive. I can tell you that the delays
stem from five substantive, interconnected challenges that reflect deeper
tensions about financial
architecture, technological feasibility, and political will. Reducing this to a
simple fight over yield misunderstands both the stakes and the sophistication
required for meaningful regulation.
The Stablecoin Yield Loophole
The first and perhaps most technical issue concerns the
so-called "yield loophole" in the GENIUS Act. It is true that the
GENIUS Act, signed into law in 2025, explicitly prohibits permitted payment
stablecoin issuers from paying interest or yield solely for holding a
stablecoin.
However, as banking
stakeholders have correctly identified, this prohibition does not automatically
extend to third-party intermediaries. Exchanges, wallet providers, or payment
applications may offer "rewards," "staking yields," or
other return-like incentives on idle stablecoin balances.
This is not regulatory pedantry. It is a legitimate concern
about regulatory arbitrage. If non-bank entities can replicate the economic
function of an insured deposit account without equivalent capital, liquidity,
or consumer protection safeguards, we risk creating a two-tiered financial
system where innovation becomes a vector for systemic vulnerability.
The
banking sector's push for unambiguous statutory language in the CLARITY Act is
less about stifling competition and more about ensuring functional equivalence
in risk
management.
With the total stablecoin market capitalization exceeding
$307 billion as of February 2026, the scale of potential disintermediation
demands careful calibration, not ideological reflex.
Operational Risks of Always-On Stablecoin Rails
Operational and systemic stability concerns extend far
beyond yield semantics. The 24/7 nature of crypto markets introduces liquidity
and settlement pressures that traditional banking infrastructure simply was not
designed to absorb.
Community banks, which form the backbone of American credit
allocation, lack the technological capacity to liquidate reserve assets such as
U.S. Treasuries in real time to meet instant redemption demands that could
cascade during periods of market stress.
Without parity in operational resilience, always-on stablecoin rails
could propagate shocks into the traditional payment system. This would
undermine the very stability the Act seeks to protect.
This is not hypothetical.
The DeFi Compliance Dilemma
Nowhere is the tension between regulatory intent and
technical reality more acute than in the treatment of decentralized finance.
The CLARITY Act's requirement that DeFi protocols register as financial
institutions and report transaction data fundamentally conflicts with the
architecture of permissionless code.
Industry experts, including many
open-source developers I have consulted, argue that enforcing bank-like KYC/AML
obligations on non-custodial, autonomous protocols is not only technically
infeasible but risks criminalizing the very act of publishing code.
The Act's provision granting the SEC discretion to exempt
certain DeFi activities is a step in the right direction, but it remains
insufficient without clearer safe harbors for truly decentralized systems.
🚨 BREAKING:
President Trump says that if the SAVE AMERICA ACT becomes law, Democrats could be locked out of winning a national election for the next 50 years.
He also confirmed that the CLARITY ACT would follow — a move aimed at turning the United States into the global hub… pic.twitter.com/IHwkeVasWf
— Mr. Crypto Whale 🐋 (@Mrcryptoxwhale) March 9, 2026
Ethics Provisions and Political Gridlock
Compounding these technical challenges are ethics provisions
that have become political flashpoints. Senate Democrats' introduction of
stringent conflict-of-interest clauses, widely interpreted as targeting
high-profile crypto initiatives linked to former President Trump, such as World
Liberty Financial, has intensified partisan gridlock.
While preventing public
officials from profiting off the policies they shape is unquestionably
important, weaponizing ethics rules to score political points complicates bipartisan
compromise on the bill's core regulatory framework.
At the core of these disputes is the SEC–CFTC jurisdictional
tension. Banks favor the SEC’s investor-protection mandate, while critics
question the CFTC’s capacity to oversee retail platforms. The CLARITY Act
splits authority: the CFTC handles anti-fraud and anti-manipulation in digital
commodities, and the SEC covers investment contract assets during fundraising.
While clear in theory, this risks fragmented oversight. SEC Chair Paul Atkins
calls it a way to "future-proof" rules, highlighting that ambiguity
mainly benefits bad actors.
A Framework for Digital Asset Markets
The Act’s three-category framework—digital commodities,
investment contract assets, and permitted payment stablecoins—aims to bring
order to a chaotic market. Investment contract assets are treated as securities
only during fundraising, converting to digital commodities in secondary
markets.
The CLARITY Act aims to balance innovation with protection,
but its success depends on rules that are technologically literate,
economically sound, and ethically grounded. With the stablecoin market now
larger than the GDP of many nations, today’s decisions will shape tomorrow’s
financial infrastructure and must be guided by evidence, not echo chambers.
Anndy Lian is an all-rounded business strategist in Asia. He has provided advisory across a variety of industries for local, international, public listed companies and governments. He is an early blockchain adopter and experienced serial entrepreneur, book author, investor, board member and keynote speaker.
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