Coinbase has told Senate lawmakers it cannot support the latest compromise language in the CLARITY Act, the primary U.S. crypto market structure bill currently before Congress, according to a new report. The exchange giant’s opposition centers on stablecoin yield restrictions that could threaten roughly 20% of its total revenue.
$1.9M
Coinbase Federal Lobbying Spend (2023)
Source: OpenSecrets — underscoring the exchange’s stake in shaping U.S. crypto legislation.
What the CLARITY Act Compromise Proposes
The CLARITY Act is a bipartisan crypto market structure bill led by Republican Senator Thom Tillis and Democratic Senator Angela Alsobrooks. It builds on the GENIUS Act, which was signed into law in July 2025 and regulated stablecoin issuers but left room for third-party platforms like exchanges to offer yield on stablecoin holdings.
The latest compromise draft closes that gap. It would bar rewards on passive stablecoin balances and ban any structures “economically equivalent to interest,” according to Cointelegraph. The provision effectively prevents exchanges and other third parties from paying stablecoin yields to customers.
The bill may still allow “activity-based rewards,” such as incentives tied to using stablecoins for payments, trading, or lending. But whether that carve-out is broad enough to preserve existing business models remains an open question.
Why Coinbase Is Reportedly Opposing the Compromise
Coinbase informed Senate offices on March 26, 2026 that it has concerns about the stablecoin yield language in the latest CLARITY Act compromise. The exchange currently offers 3.5% yield on USDC holdings through its distribution partnership with Circle, and stablecoin-related revenue represented approximately 20% of Coinbase’s total revenue in Q3 2025.
The financial stakes are significant. Following news of the proposed stablecoin yield restrictions earlier this week, Coinbase (COIN) stock fell approximately 8-11%. Circle (CRCL) stock dropped roughly 20%, reflecting the market’s assessment of how damaging these provisions could be to both companies.
This is not the first time Coinbase has pulled support from crypto legislation. The exchange’s withdrawal of backing for an earlier version of the bill in January preceded the Senate Banking Committee’s indefinite postponement of a markup vote, demonstrating the company’s considerable influence over the legislative process.
Banks have argued that stablecoin yields offered by exchanges circumvent the GENIUS Act’s framework and risk deposit flight from traditional banking. The crypto industry counters that deposit flight risks are overstated and that banks are engaging in anticompetitive behavior to protect their own deposit base.
What Coinbase’s Stance Means for Crypto Legislation
The impact of Coinbase’s opposition is already visible in prediction markets. Polymarket odds of the CLARITY Act passing in 2026 fell from 71% to 51% within days of the stablecoin yield controversy emerging.
Senator Cynthia Lummis has urged both sides to find common ground. “We can’t wait until 2030 for another chance,” Lummis said, adding that “bipartisan compromise is necessary for the Clarity Act to pass.”
Patrick Witt, Executive Director of the President’s Council of Advisors for Digital Assets, struck a more optimistic tone: “It’s all going to work out. Bullish.” The White House’s publicly positive posture contrasts with the growing friction between industry players and lawmakers over the bill’s specifics.
The competitive landscape could also shift. Tether (USDT), which does not offer yield to holders, is largely unaffected by the proposed restrictions and could benefit if USDC-based yield products are curtailed. Tether recently announced it is hiring a Big Four accounting firm for a full reserve audit, adding competitive pressure on Circle at a vulnerable moment.
Non-U.S. stablecoin platforms operating outside the CLARITY Act’s jurisdiction could also capture yield-seeking users if domestic restrictions take effect, potentially pushing activity offshore, a concern that has dogged stablecoin regulation from the start.
The path forward hinges on whether lawmakers can craft yield language narrow enough to satisfy banking interests while preserving the business models that major crypto firms depend on. With Coinbase’s opposition now public, the bill’s sponsors face the same dynamic that stalled progress in January: advancing comprehensive crypto legislation without the industry’s largest U.S. exchange on board.
52 Million
Estimated U.S. Cryptocurrency Owners
Source: Coinbase / industry estimates — a constituency large enough that federal crypto legislation has become a major political issue.
With an estimated 52 million Americans holding cryptocurrency, the political calculus around the CLARITY Act extends well beyond Wall Street and Silicon Valley. The next concrete milestone is whether the Senate Banking Committee reschedules a markup vote, or whether Coinbase’s opposition once again pushes that timeline further out.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.
