White House Convenes Banks and Crypto Companies Amid CLARITY Act Deadlock

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Officers within the administration of US President Donald Trump are reportedly set to sit down down with executives from the banking and cryptocurrency industries on Monday as lawmakers try and revive the stalled CLARITY Act.

Folks acquainted with the matter told Reuters the assembly will likely be hosted by the White Home’s crypto council and can convey collectively business commerce teams to debate how the invoice treats curiosity and different rewards provided on dollar-pegged stablecoins.

The laws has been held up within the Senate for months, with a scheduled Banking Committee vote postponed earlier this month amid considerations from lawmakers and business teams over the stablecoin curiosity provision.

The CLARITY Act is a proposed crypto market-structure bill that seeks to make clear how digital belongings are regulated in the US, together with how oversight could be divided between the Securities and Trade Fee (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Buying and selling Fee (CFTC).

Associated: Banks fear stablecoin ‘bank run,’ regulators see limited impact

Banks and crypto corporations conflict over stablecoin curiosity guidelines

Progress on the CLARITY Act has been slowed by a dispute over whether or not third events ought to be allowed to supply yield on stablecoins.

Whereas the GENIUS Act, handed in July 2025, bars stablecoin issuers from paying curiosity, it leaves open whether or not exchanges or different intermediaries can present rewards, a niche that has fueled rigidity between crypto corporations and conventional banks.

For months, financial institution lobbyists have pushed Congress to ban third-party stablecoin yield, arguing it may trigger deposit flight and weaken the banking system. On Jan. 15, Financial institution of America CEO Brian Moynihan warned that interest-bearing stablecoins may draw as a lot as $6 trillion out of US banks, probably constraining lending and elevating borrowing prices.

Crypto exchanges akin to Coinbase, which supply rewards on stablecoin holdings, argue that banks are trying to make use of laws to remove competitors. On Jan. 14, Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong withdrew the company’s support for the bill, saying Coinbase would “fairly don’t have any invoice than a foul invoice.”

Coinbase, Kraken, Banks, United States, White House, Donald Trump
Supply: Brian Armstrong

Opposition to the invoice throughout the crypto sector shouldn’t be uniform. A number of outstanding corporations and advocacy teams, together with Coin Middle, a16z, the Digital Chamber, Kraken and Ripple have expressed support for the Senate’s proposal.

Journal: A ‘tsunami’ of wealth is headed for crypto: Nansen’s Alex Svanevik