The U.S. Senate Banking Committee advanced the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act on May 14, 2026, clearing a key procedural hurdle that sends the crypto market structure bill to the full Senate floor for debate.
The committee approved H.R. 3633 by a 15-9 vote, marking the first time a comprehensive digital asset market structure framework has cleared both the House and a Senate committee. The bill had already passed the House 294-134 on July 17, 2025, before being referred to the Senate Banking Committee in September 2025.
Chairman Tim Scott framed the markup as creating clear rules of the road for digital assets, positioning the legislation as an overdue answer to the industry’s longstanding complaints about regulatory ambiguity.
What the Clarity Act Would Change
The bill would give the CFTC the central regulatory role over digital commodities while preserving targeted SEC authority over tokens that function as securities. According to a Congressional Research Service summary, the framework includes a $75 million cap on exempt fundraising over any 12-month period.
The Senate Banking Committee’s substitute text also retained key provisions beyond market structure. Section 604 carries the Blockchain Regulatory Certainty Act, which shields non-custodial software developers from money transmitter requirements. Section 605 includes the Keep Your Coins Act, protecting self-custody rights.
Coin Center, a crypto policy nonprofit, noted that the Clarity Act advanced through committee with those core Blockchain Regulatory Certainty Act provisions intact, but warned that developer and self-custody protections could still be bargained away before a full Senate floor vote.
Why Regulatory Clarity Matters for Crypto Markets
The split between SEC and CFTC jurisdiction has been one of the most persistent sources of uncertainty for exchanges, token issuers, and institutional investors. Without clear definitions of which tokens qualify as commodities versus securities, companies face overlapping enforcement actions and compliance costs that discourage U.S.-based operations.
A defined market structure framework could reduce those barriers. Exchanges would know which regulator to register with, token projects would have a clearer path to lawful fundraising under the $75 million exemption cap, and institutional participants could model compliance costs with more precision. The growing role of stablecoin transaction volumes in global payments underscores how much of the industry’s growth depends on regulatory predictability.
The bill’s bipartisan House passage, with 294 votes in favor, suggests that the demand for clarity extends well beyond the crypto industry itself. Traditional financial firms evaluating onchain trading infrastructure have cited regulatory uncertainty as a top barrier to entry.
What to Watch Before a Floor Vote
Advancing out of committee does not guarantee final passage. The bill must still be scheduled for a full Senate vote, where it could face amendments, procedural delays, or a filibuster requiring 60 votes for cloture.
Coin Center’s post-markup analysis specifically flagged the developer and self-custody sections as vulnerable to negotiation. If those provisions are stripped in a floor amendment, the bill’s scope would narrow significantly, potentially reducing its appeal to the broader crypto community while still satisfying institutional compliance demands.
Traders and companies should monitor three near-term checkpoints: Senate leadership scheduling the bill for floor debate, any proposed amendments targeting the BRCA or Keep Your Coins Act sections, and whether the Senate version diverges enough from the House bill to require a conference committee. Corporate treasury strategies, including approaches like large-scale capital restructuring, may also shift depending on how the final regulatory framework treats digital asset holdings.
The Fear and Greed Index sat at 31 on the day of the vote, reflecting broader market caution even as legislative momentum builds. The gap between policy progress and market sentiment suggests investors are waiting for a Senate floor vote before pricing in regulatory tailwinds.
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.
