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CLARITY Act and Crypto Markets: A Controversial Redefinition of Regulation

Banks vs. crypto: the CLARITY Act redraws rules, risks massive deposit shifts, and reassigns regulator power. Read how markets might change.

redefined crypto regulatory classification

How the CLARITY Act Closes the Crypto Spot Market Regulatory Gap

For years, the crypto spot market operated in a kind of regulatory no-man’s land. Nobody was really in charge. The CFTC could chase fraudsters but couldn’t supervise exchanges or set safety rules. The SEC had no authority either. Think of it like a busy intersection with no traffic lights.

The CLARITY Act fixes this by giving the CFTC full authority over digital commodity spot markets. Exchanges must now register, follow trading rules, maintain capital requirements, and report publicly. Brokers and dealers face similar requirements. In effect, crypto spot markets finally get a rulebook — and someone to enforce it. Exchanges and broker-dealers are also required to segregate customer funds and use qualified digital asset custodians, adding a foundational layer of financial protection for market participants. This change could also speed settlement times and reduce counterparty risks by standardizing custody and trade processes.

Critics, however, warn that the Act’s lengthy and complex exemptions from securities laws create opportunities for legal exploitation, allowing industry clients to secure lower compliance burdens that may prove difficult for regulators to correct when flaws emerge.

Bitcoin vs. ICO Tokens: How CLARITY Act Classification Works

Now that the CLARITY Act gives the CFTC a rulebook to govern crypto spot markets, the next big question is which digital assets actually fall under that rulebook — and which ones don’t.

The Act sorts tokens into clear buckets so regulators know who handles what.

  • Bitcoin qualifies as a digital commodity because its value ties directly to real blockchain use
  • ICO tokens sold to raise money are investment contract assets under SEC oversight
  • Payment stablecoins get their own separate category entirely
  • Traditional securities and derivatives stay excluded from the commodity definition
  • Secondary ICO token trading still follows securities law

The bill passed the House on July 17, 2025, by a 294-134 bipartisan vote, though most Democratic opposition centered on investor protection concerns about shifting authority away from the SEC.

Importantly, regardless of how the CLARITY Act classifies a digital asset, the IRS continues to treat all cryptocurrency as property for tax purposes, meaning capital gains obligations remain unchanged for investors navigating the new regulatory landscape.

A key operational detail is that transactions are verified by network nodes and miners before being recorded on the blockchain, which helps secure and finalize transfers of digital assets like Bitcoin transaction confirmations.

SEC vs. CFTC: How the CLARITY Act Divides Crypto Authority

When two powerful agencies share the same turf, someone has to draw the boundary lines. The CLARITY Act gives the SEC authority over crypto assets that act like investments. The CFTC gets authority over digital commodities like Bitcoin and Ethereum. Think of it like two referees covering different parts of the field.

The SEC watches for securities. The CFTC oversees commodity spot markets. Both agencies released a joint interpretation in March 2026 to avoid confusion. Still, critics worry the CFTC has less experience protecting everyday investors than the SEC does. Sharing power does not always mean sharing expertise equally.

The joint interpretation also establishes a five-part token taxonomy that classifies crypto assets based on their characteristics, uses, and functions to help determine which agency has oversight. The interpretation acknowledges that some crypto assets may not fit neatly into any single category or may exhibit hybrid characteristics that could still bring them within the definition of a security. A significant distinction is how spot trading involves immediate ownership and settlement, unlike derivative contracts.

What the CLARITY Act Changes for Investors and Crypto Builders

The CLARITY Act reshapes the playing field for both everyday investors and the developers building crypto products. It removes old guesswork about rules and replaces confusion with clear steps forward.

The CLARITY Act clears the fog, replacing regulatory guesswork with straightforward rules everyone can actually follow.

  • Investors gain stronger consumer protections and clearer disclosure requirements
  • Developers who build non-custodial tools get explicit protections from heavy regulatory burdens
  • Institutional investors finally have legal certainty to enter domestic crypto markets
  • Commodity pool rules now cover digital asset spot market activities
  • Registration standards give market participants a federal framework to follow confidently

Think of it like adding traffic lights to a highway that previously had none. The House passed the CLARITY Act 294–134 on July 17, 2025, sending it to the Senate where lawmakers face pressure to act on market-structure legislation by September 30, 2025. Senator Cynthia Lummis has warned that failure to pass the bill this year could delay market structure legislation until 2030 or beyond. AI-driven tools can help investors and firms assess these changes more quickly by analyzing historical market data to spot potential impacts.

Why Banks Are Fighting the CLARITY Act Behind Closed Doors

Behind closed doors, traditional banks are pushing hard against the CLARITY Act — and their reasons come down to one word: deposits.

If stablecoins start paying 4–5% yearly yields, people might move their savings out of regular bank accounts faster than you can say “interest rate.” Banks estimate losing trillions of dollars in deposits.

Community banks worry especially because their local loans depend on those savings. The ICBA warns of a potential $1.3 trillion in deposit flight if stablecoin yield via intermediaries is allowed to continue.

So banking groups like the American Bankers Association are lobbying Congress aggressively.

They want strict rules blocking any stablecoin from paying interest-like rewards.

For banks, this fight is about survival — not just competition. JPMorgan Chase alone holds $ 2.5 trillion in deposits, making it one of the most exposed institutions to any large-scale migration toward stablecoin-based savings alternatives. A growing number of retail investors are already exploring DeFi staking as a way to earn crypto rewards.

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