U.S. digital asset regulation is set to undergo a turning point: the CLARITY Act has gained bipartisan support and has entered a critical legislative phase
According to CoinDesk, during a recent Senate Banking Committee review, substantial progress was made in advancing the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, referred to as the "CLARITY Act," which passed into the Senate full review stage with a vote of 15 to 9.
Several bipartisan lawmakers emphasized the urgent need for the United States to establish a unified regulatory framework covering digital assets to clarify asset classification, trading platform regulation, and market structure rules, thereby providing long-term certainty for the industry. Angela Alsobrooks pointed out from a family perspective that the younger generation shows a natural interest in digital assets, and the regulatory system should strike a balance between "opportunity and protection" to avoid technological development being detached from regulatory constraints. Tim Scott emphasized that legislation should be promoted from the perspective of economic opportunity and the American Dream, while Cynthia Lummis stated that the legislative process has already shown a clear foundation for bipartisan cooperation.
Supporters believe that digital assets have become an irreversible trend, with approximately 68 million Americans holding related assets, but a significant amount of trading still occurs on overseas platforms. The U.S. urgently needs to establish a domestic regulatory system to enhance market transparency and investor protection levels.
Analysis indicates that the CLARITY Act is seen as a key complement following the stablecoin-related legislation (GENIUS Act). Without supporting rules at the market structure level, the U.S. may lose its leading position in the competition for digital financial infrastructure. As the bill advances to the Senate full stage, there is widespread attention on whether it can achieve final legislation based on bipartisan consensus to establish the core rules of the U.S. digital asset regulatory framework.
You may also like

DeFi has reached its most dangerous moment: the real vulnerabilities are not in the code

Who can make money in the era of Agents?

From brokerages to banks, Hong Kong intensifies efforts to clean up cross-border investment account openings

The trillion-dollar frenzy of selling memory, profits from buying memory are halved

2 years, 225 times the return? Unveiling the mysterious researcher Serenity's AI "bottleneck" investment technique

B.AI partners with BNB Chain to launch the "Billion AI Token Subsidy" celebration, fully igniting the on-chain intelligent agent ecosystem

How did Micron win a trillion-dollar market value while Samsung relies on technology cycles and Hynix relies on HBM?

Senior Public Company Financial Audit: Taking Hashkey as an Example, Discussing Which Account to Include for Exchange Issued Platform Tokens?

Bankless Founder: Why I Sold All My ETH

Morning News | Hyperliquid launches off-chain event prediction market contracts; Strategy completes $1.5 billion debt buyback; Kelp DAO announces rsETH has fully recovered

Morning Report | Binance launches DYOR research tool; YZi Labs launches recruitment platform YZi Talent; Vitalik states that the Ethereum Foundation will "downsize" and reduce the amount of ETH sold

Insiders betting on Musk are reaping "historic returns."

Ten Thousand Characters Breakdown of On-Chain Vaults: Eight Major Tracks, Who is Rising and Who is Declining?

Behind NEAR's Doubling: 3 Major Trends Becoming the Engine of Coin Prices

Visa and Stripe are both working on stablecoins, but their focus is not on payments

How Traders Keep Profits When PEPE WLD and FET Start Moving Fast Again

It's easy to conquer a city, but difficult to govern it: Polymarket wants to establish a presence globally but still has to bow down everywhere




