The U.S. Senate Banking Committee advanced the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act on May 14, 2026, clearing a key legislative hurdle by a 15-9 vote and sending the bill to the Senate floor for full consideration.
The committee's bipartisan approval of H.R. 3633, the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act of 2025, marks the furthest a comprehensive crypto market-structure bill has progressed in the Senate. Committee passage does not make the bill law, but it signals sufficient bipartisan support to warrant a floor debate.
The Senate Banking Committee is the primary gateway for financial regulation legislation. Bills that fail to clear it rarely reach a floor vote, making the 15-9 margin a meaningful indicator of where the chamber stands on crypto oversight.
What the Bill Would Change for Crypto Markets
The act targets the jurisdictional ambiguity that has defined U.S. crypto regulation for years. Under a new "Regulation Crypto" framework, eligible issuers could raise up to $50 million per calendar year for four years, subject to a $200 million total cap, without full SEC registration.
Digital commodity brokers, dealers, and exchanges would be classified as financial institutions under the Bank Secrecy Act. That designation triggers anti-money laundering, customer identification, and due-diligence requirements that many platforms currently lack.
The bill also addresses decentralized finance directly. Platforms that fail a new "sufficiently decentralized" test would be treated as financial institutions with suspicious-activity monitoring obligations. Passive, deposit-like stablecoin rewards would be banned, though transaction-based rewards could continue under joint SEC, CFTC, and Treasury rules.
TLDR Keypoints
- The Senate Banking Committee passed the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act 15-9, sending it to the Senate floor.
- A new fundraising exemption would let eligible crypto issuers raise up to $200 million without full SEC registration.
- DeFi platforms, stablecoin yields, and digital commodity intermediaries all face new compliance definitions under the bill.
Coin Center, the nonprofit crypto policy group, publicly backed the bill on May 13, 2026. Executive Director Peter Van Valkenburgh wrote that the organization is "especially encouraged by the inclusion of Section 604 in the current draft," referencing language that would protect software developers and infrastructure providers from being classified as regulated entities.
"We are especially encouraged by the inclusion of Section 604 in the current draft."
— Peter Van Valkenburgh, Coin Center (source)
What Happens Next
The bill now requires scheduling for a full Senate floor vote. If it passes the Senate, it must be reconciled with any House version before reaching the president's desk. That process could take months, and amendments during floor debate remain likely.
The committee advance arrives while Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs have faced heavy outflows and broader market sentiment sits at 27 on the Fear & Greed Index, firmly in "Fear" territory. Regulatory clarity has been a recurring demand from institutional participants, and the bill's progress could shift expectations even before final passage.
For traders watching corporate Bitcoin accumulation trends and earlier coverage of the CLARITY Act's trajectory, the committee vote confirms that comprehensive market-structure legislation is no longer stalled at the discussion stage. The next test is whether the full Senate takes it up before the current session ends.
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.