tracee briefing · 15 May 2026 · 7 min read

Fifteen to nine: Congress draws the line between the payment stablecoin and the tokenized asset.

Published15 May 2026
SourceCoinDesk, 14 May 2026
AuthorBassel Assaad, tracee
TagsRegulation · Stablecoins · Market structure
01 · The raw item

One vote. Two regulators, and a lot of open items.

The Senate Banking Committee voted 15-9 to send the Clarity Act to the floor, with Senators Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz.) and Angela Alsobrooks (D-Md.) joining their GOP colleagues to advance the measure. The committee approved the 309-page draft released earlier this week, which would formally divide oversight of digital assets between the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. CoinDesk · 14 May 2026

That paragraph bundles four decisions with very different probabilities of becoming law. They are not the same story.

02 · What actually happened

Three moves are done. Two are conditional or pending.

The committee vote contains five distinct moves. Their statuses diverge significantly.

Shipped Committee passage, 15-9. The Digital Asset Market Clarity Act clears the Senate Banking Committee for the first time. The 309-page text is now the basis for any Senate floor vote. Chairman Tim Scott (R-SC) called the vote after the bill text was released on 11 May.
Shipped SEC/CFTC jurisdiction drawn. Digital assets on sufficiently decentralized networks, Bitcoin, Ethereum, go to CFTC spot-market authority. Token-securities stay with the SEC. The definitional boundary is in the committee text.
Shipped Stablecoin yield restriction confirmed. The bill carries forward the GENIUS Act yield ban at the payment stablecoin layer. No override, no carve-out. Yield belongs to the reserve-asset layer above the settlement layer, not within it.
Exploring Ethics provision: conditional Democratic votes. Senators Gallego and Alsobrooks voted yes in committee with explicit caveats: both require language barring sitting government officials from holding crypto assets. Gallego stated publicly he will vote no on the Senate floor if this remains unresolved.
Pending Senate floor, 60 votes required. Senate cloture requires 60. The 15-9 committee count does not translate directly to the floor. The majority leader must assemble a coalition that extends well beyond the committee's bipartisan margin.

The committee text is the most complete US digital asset market structure legislation ever to reach this stage. The floor vote is the test the bill has not yet passed.

03 · The architecture

Two bills. One perimeter around the US programmable dollar.

GENIUS (signed July 2025) and CLARITY (pending floor) define three distinct regulatory layers. Each has its own regulator, its own yield rule, and its own institutional on-ramp.

US digital asset stack · GENIUS Act (2025) + CLARITY Act (pending)
Payment stablecoins
JPMD · USDC · USDT · bank regulators · no yield · GENIUS Act perimeter
↓ settles against
Digital commodities
BTC · ETH · decentralized-network tokens · CFTC spot authority
Digital securities
Token-securities · centralized issuers · SEC jurisdiction
↓ yield migrates here
Reserve assets (yield layer)
JLTXX · BUIDL · BENJI · GENIUS Act eligible reserve · tokenized T-bills
Underlying
U.S. dollar
TGA · Fed Funds · T-bills · the collateral chain beneath all four layers

JPMorgan filed JLTXX on 12 May 2026, the day before the committee vote. The reserve-asset layer, the only layer where yield is permitted, now has a clearer regulatory frame on both sides. That timing is deliberate.

04 · Why it matters

Three structural consequences, one already priced in by the infrastructure players.

GENIUS and CLARITY together match MiCA's scope, not its architecture. The EU covered payment tokens, e-money tokens, and crypto-asset market structure in a single instrument (MiCA, December 2024). The US used two sequential bills. The sequencing reflects political economy: stablecoins had broader bipartisan consensus and went first. The coverage is equivalent; the construction sequence is different. What the US does not have is MiCA's single-authority structure. Two bills, two regulators, two rulemaking timelines.

The yield ban is load-bearing, and the infrastructure players knew it before the vote. GENIUS banned yield at the payment stablecoin layer. CLARITY confirms that ban explicitly; no override, no carve-out. The practical consequence: yield migrates up the stack to reserve assets. JPMorgan filed JLTXX on 12 May. BlackRock expanded BUIDL's collateral surface on 9 May. Both moves predate the committee vote. Both are positioning moves for the layer that earns yield because the settlement layer below it cannot.

GENIUS drew the perimeter around the dollar. CLARITY draws the perimeter around everything the dollar settles against.

The CFTC on-ramp is the most consequential structural change for institutional builders. Today, prime brokers, custodians, and bank desks building Bitcoin or Ethereum products navigate SEC no-action letters and state-by-state licensing patchworks. Once the CFTC has clear spot-market authority over digital commodities, those desks can file with one federal regulator. That is not a marginal reduction in friction. It is the difference between a bespoke legal opinion for each product and a standard product structure applicable across the asset class.

05 · New vs. incremental

What the committee vote settles, and what it explicitly does not.

Not every line in the committee vote carries the same weight.

Move Status Verdict
Committee passage 15-9 Shipped Real. First clearance in committee history. The 309-page text is now the legislative floor.
Bipartisan support Exploring Thin and conditional. Two Democratic votes, both with explicit ethics caveats. Conditional is not committed.
SEC/CFTC jurisdiction Exploring Defined, not implemented. Text sets the boundary; rulemaking and House reconciliation follow. The line may shift.
Stablecoin yield ban Shipped Confirmed. Carries forward the GENIUS Act restriction with no override. The most architecturally stable item in the bill.
Senate floor, 60 votes Pending Not secured. Cloture requires 60; the committee count is not a prediction of floor arithmetic.

The stablecoin yield ban is the item with the clearest, most immediate downstream consequence for infrastructure design. Everything else remains in motion.

06 · The honest limits

Four things the committee vote does not resolve.

  • Sixty votes, not fifty-one. Senate cloture requires 60. No single party reaches that threshold. The committee's 15-9 bipartisan margin needs to expand significantly on the floor, roughly ten to eleven additional Democratic votes, not one or two.
  • Ethics is the live wire. Senator Gallego explicitly conditioned his floor vote on language barring sitting officials from crypto holdings. The White House has not signaled agreement. If that provision is not resolved, both Democratic crossover votes evaporate and the bipartisan ceiling drops below what floor passage requires.
  • House reconciliation reopens the definitions. The House Financial Services Committee approved its own CLARITY Act text in 2025. A conference committee will negotiate the SEC/CFTC definitional boundary the Senate set on 14 May. The final enacted text may differ materially from yesterday's committee draft.
  • CFTC is underfunded for the mandate. Acquiring spot-market oversight of a multi-trillion-dollar asset class requires enforcement staff, examination capacity, and market surveillance tools the CFTC does not currently have. Budget authorization is not included in the bill as drafted.
07 · Macro context

The EU has the finished building. The US has the approved blueprint.

MiCA is not pending. Its transitional period ends 1 July 2026, six weeks from today. At that date, EU digital asset service providers, stablecoin issuers, and token trading venues operate under a completed, single-authority regulatory frame. The CLARITY Act, if it passes the Senate floor and survives House reconciliation, would not be signed before Q4 2026 at the earliest. European regulated platforms have a structural head start measured in months, not quarters. For institutions building in both jurisdictions, the practical question is which framework they file against first.

The institutional players building reserve-layer infrastructure did not wait for votes. JPMorgan filed JLTXX on 12 May, the day before the committee hearing. BlackRock expanded BUIDL's DeFi collateral surface on 9 May. Both moves position for the yield layer that GENIUS already permits, against a market structure framework that CLARITY is still assembling. The pattern is consistent: institutions that can read a legislative calendar build for the regime before it is enacted.

The committee vote confirms the direction. It does not compress the timeline. Infrastructure builders do not have the luxury of waiting for the floor vote.

For the cross-border settlement corridors where stablecoin payment rails are already moving value, GENIUS Act is already the operative framework. CLARITY matters one layer up: it determines what tokenized U.S. assets, Treasury tokens, commodity-linked instruments, can flow alongside those stablecoins in cross-border corridors with a clear federal regulatory designation on the asset leg. When a Kinexys client in Singapore redeems a tokenized Treasury, the cash leg (GENIUS-governed) and the asset leg (CFTC-governed post-CLARITY) will both carry federal coverage. That pairing does not exist today.

08 · Bottom line

The committee vote is real. The floor vote is the test the bill has not taken yet.

The ethics provision is the binding constraint on passage, not vote arithmetic. Resolve the sitting-officials crypto-holdings question and the bill likely passes by Q4 2026. When it does, the US will operate a two-bill framework that matches MiCA's coverage without matching its architecture, delivered eighteen months later, with two regulators instead of one. That framework will be functional. It will not be elegant. And the infrastructure players who built ahead of it will have locked in their positions before the starting gun.

Three things to watch:

  • Gallego's floor statement on ethics language. His public position after White House negotiations is the leading indicator for whether the bipartisan margin holds. A concession on the officials' crypto-holdings restriction is the trigger to watch.
  • MiCA July 1, 2026 transition deadline. Six weeks from today, EU infrastructure goes live under a completed regulatory frame. Monitor whether European regulated platforms establish cross-border settlement rails in the window before the US framework is enacted.
  • DTCC's October 2026 tokenization go-live. DTCC's schedule does not depend on Senate floor votes. CLARITY's CFTC perimeter is the frame that gives institutional tokenized-asset products a federal regulatory home; how that interacts with DTCC's October launch is the architectural question to model now.
Frequently asked

Common questions about the CLARITY Act and the US digital asset framework.

What is the CLARITY Act?
The Digital Asset Market Clarity Act is a 309-page US Senate bill that divides oversight of digital assets between the SEC and the CFTC. Under its framework, digital assets on sufficiently decentralized networks (Bitcoin, Ethereum) fall under CFTC spot-market authority; token-securities stay with the SEC. The Senate Banking Committee voted 15-9 to advance the bill on 14 May 2026.
How does the CLARITY Act differ from the GENIUS Act?
The GENIUS Act (signed 18 July 2025) governs payment stablecoins: 1:1 reserve backing, yield ban, bank regulators. The CLARITY Act governs everything else: digital commodities (CFTC), digital securities (SEC), and broader market structure. Together they cover the same scope as MiCA, which addressed all categories in a single EU instrument.
What is the SEC/CFTC split?
The CLARITY Act uses a decentralization maturity test. Tokens on networks the bill defines as sufficiently decentralized go to the CFTC as digital commodities. Bitcoin and Ethereum clearly qualify. More centralized issuances remain with the SEC as digital securities. The boundary is set in committee text and will be refined in rulemaking and House reconciliation.
Why does the committee vote matter if 60 Senate votes are still needed?
The committee vote produces a final 309-page text that is now the basis for any floor vote. Before 14 May, CLARITY had never cleared committee. That removed the most significant procedural hurdle short of the floor. Infrastructure builders, custodians, and regulators can now plan against a stable text rather than a moving draft.
What is the biggest risk to passage?
The ethics provision. Senators Gallego and Alsobrooks conditioned their floor votes on language barring sitting officials from holding crypto assets. Gallego stated publicly he votes no on the floor if this is unresolved. Without both Democratic votes, the bipartisan margin for 60-vote cloture becomes very difficult to assemble.
How does CLARITY affect stablecoins like USDC and JPMD?
CLARITY does not govern payment stablecoins directly, that is GENIUS Act territory. What it does is confirm the GENIUS yield ban with no override. USDC and JPMD remain no-yield settlement instruments. Yield migrates to the reserve-asset layer (JLTXX, BUIDL, BENJI), which are GENIUS-eligible reserve assets sitting one level above the stablecoin in the stack.
How does the CLARITY Act compare to MiCA?
MiCA (EU, December 2024) covers stablecoins, e-money tokens, and market structure in one instrument with a single authority structure (ESMA/NCAs). The US split the same scope across two bills (GENIUS + CLARITY) and two regulators (SEC, CFTC). MiCA's transitional period ends 1 July 2026, giving the EU a structural head start before CLARITY likely passes the Senate floor.
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