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Bitcoin climbed close to $82,000 on Tuesday as news broke that the Senate Banking Committee had officially scheduled Thursday as the date for its long-delayed markup of the CLARITY Act. The move gave crypto markets an immediate boost as investors priced in the growing possibility that comprehensive digital asset regulation in the United States is finally within reach.
Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire appeared on Fox Business shortly after the announcement to share his assessment of where the bill stands and what it means for the industry.
What Allaire Said
Allaire described the CLARITY Act as a critical piece of legislation for both the digital asset industry and the broader financial system, saying it creates a regulatory pathway for digital token issuance, market structure, and supervision that the industry has needed for years.
On the stablecoin yield compromise that has dominated the final stages of negotiations, Allaire said Circle views the outcome positively. Under the current text, platforms cannot simply offer passive yield on stablecoin balances the way a bank pays interest on deposits. Instead, rewards must be tied to actual utility, usage, transactions, payments, and other activities.
“That is really where we see the benefits of this technology, in its utility, not just as a passive way to hold value,” Allaire said. “We think it is a great compromise.”
He acknowledged the compromise has not made everyone happy, pointing out that neither the digital asset platforms nor the banks got everything they wanted. His interpretation of that outcome was telling.
“When not everyone is happy with every dimension, that may be a sign of ultimately finding a good compromise,” he said.
On the bill’s prospects, Allaire said, “It is very clear this is a top agenda item for the President and for Congress. For those reasons I think the CLARITY Act is well on its way to becoming law.”
The Banking Lobby’s Objection
Fox Business obtained a letter from major banking trade groups outlining their core concern with the current legislation. Banks argued the bill would allow crypto platforms to offer interest-like rewards on payment stablecoins, potentially encouraging deposit flight from traditional banks into crypto platforms.
Allaire pushed back on the framing. He said that the GENIUS Act, which governs Circle and USDC directly, already prohibits paying interest directly to stablecoin holders. The CLARITY Act builds on that framework rather than creating a loophole around it.
What Thursday Means
The Senate Banking Committee markup on Thursday at 10:30 AM EST is the most significant checkpoint the bill has faced. If it clears the committee the full Senate must still vote before the bill reaches President Trump’s desk. The White House is targeting July 4 for the final signature. Thursday is where that timeline either stays on track or faces its most serious test yet.


