Representatives from the digital asset industry reportedly met with the Senate Banking Committee on March 23 to review a White House-backed compromise—led by Sens. Tillis and Alsobrooks—on stablecoin rewards intended to revive the stalled CLARITY Act.
The ‘Passive vs. Active’ Yield Pivot
Representatives from the digital asset industry met with the U.S. Senate Banking Committee on Monday, March 23, for a closed-door review of an agreement between the White House and a bipartisan Senate duo—Thom Tillis (R-NC) and Angela Alsobrooks (D-MD)—regarding stablecoin rewards. The deal aims to unblock the CLARITY Act after months of legislative paralysis.
The primary friction point centered on the bill’s language regarding stablecoin interest. Traditional banking lobbyists have opposed provisions that would allow stablecoin issuers to offer high-yield products, fearing a massive deposit flight from commercial banks into digital dollar equivalents.
According to reports, the new compromise establishes a strict regulatory boundary. The accrual of yield on idle stablecoin balances—where a user earns money simply for holding the token—will likely be prohibited. On the other hand, rewards tied to specific utility, such as payments, transfers, or active platform engagement, will remain permitted.
To satisfy banking concerns, Senator Cynthia Lummis (R-WY) was recently quoted stating that traditional banking terminology, including deposits and interest, would be scrubbed from the legislative text to ensure digital assets are not marketed as direct competitors to traditional savings accounts.
A Narrowing Legislative Window
While the yield agreement clears a major hurdle, the window for final passage is closing. The Senate Banking Committee is targeting a formal markup in the second half of April, immediately following the Easter recess. However, the timeline remains precarious; the Senate schedule is currently congested by debates over the SAVE America Act and government funding, which could delay the April markup or push the recess start date.
Senator Bernie Moreno (R-OH) has already warned that if the CLARITY Act does not reach the Senate floor by May, it risks being sidelined indefinitely as the 2026 midterm election cycle takes priority.
Industry experts argue that further delays could damage U.S. competitiveness. Michael Treacy, Commercial Director at Openpayd, noted that while a delay does not signal a reversal in progress, it may prompt companies to seek jurisdictions with greater regulatory certainty.
“One of the biggest barriers for enterprises modernizing their financial infrastructure is internal inertia,” Treacy warned. “Prolonged uncertainty gives risk and compliance teams another reason to pause, at precisely the moment the technology is ready and the business case is clear.”
Treacy pointed to Europe’s MiCA framework as a successful early-mover advantage. “A delay to the CLARITY Act would not reverse progress, but it would slow it… the U.S. risks losing ground to other countries if progress stalls, a concern the President has been vocal about. The opportunity is there, but only if they build on the current momentum.”
FAQ 💡
- What did the March 23 closed-door meeting address? Lawmakers and industry discussed a White House-backed compromise on stablecoin rewards to unblock the CLARITY Act.
- What yield rules does the deal propose? Idle balance yield would be banned, while rewards tied to payments, transfers, or active platform use would be allowed.
- Why are banks concerned? Banking lobbyists fear high-yield stablecoin products could trigger a mass shift of deposits from commercial banks.
- What’s the legislative timeline risk? The Senate aims for an April markup but delays from other priorities could push the CLARITY Act past May and jeopardize passage.
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