Key Highlights
- Industry leader Chris Perkins maintains the crypto sector remains robust regardless of legislative outcomes
- Current SEC and CFTC leadership actively develop regulatory frameworks providing market certainty
- Senators Tillis and Alsobrooks unveiled a stablecoin yield framework addressing the bill’s primary challenge
- The agreement prohibits deposit-like interest payments while permitting rewards linked to genuine platform engagement
- Major players including Coinbase, Circle, and the Blockchain Association endorsed the framework and called for committee action
Legislative progress on the CLARITY Act accelerated following a breakthrough on stablecoin yield provisions. Meanwhile, a prominent crypto executive maintains confidence in the sector’s trajectory regardless of congressional action.
Chris Perkins, who leads 250 Digital Asset Management, shared his perspective during a Friday appearance on Cointelegraph’s Chain Reaction podcast. He emphasized that current regulatory developments provide essential infrastructure for the industry’s continued growth.
Perkins highlighted the work of SEC Chair Paul Atkins and CFTC Chair Michael Selig, noting their daily efforts to establish policy frameworks and regulatory precedent.
“These guys are giving us the one thing we’ve needed for a very long time — certainty, stability, and ultimately, a taxonomy,” Perkins stated.
He observed a fundamental transformation in how security classification impacts crypto ventures. The previous administration’s approach under former SEC Chair Gary Gensler linked security status to enforcement actions and exchange removals. Current conditions differ substantially.
“In the past, being a security was a death sentence. Now it is awesome to be a security,” Perkins remarked.
Perkins acknowledged that enacted legislation offers greater permanence than regulatory guidance alone. “It takes an act of Congress to do something — and it is even harder to unwind a law,” he noted.
Framework for Stablecoin Rewards
Senators Thom Tillis and Angela Alsobrooks published compromise language on Friday addressing stablecoin yield provisions, which represented the bill’s remaining significant hurdle.
The framework prevents digital asset platforms from distributing interest or yield on stablecoin holdings that function similarly to traditional bank deposits. Meanwhile, it permits incentive structures connected to authentic platform activity and transaction volume.
Companies must transition reward mechanisms from passive holding strategies to active engagement models under the new guidelines.
Blockchain Association CEO Summer Mersinger praised the development while emphasizing the urgency. She highlighted that each delay in establishing legal frameworks results in talent migration and capital outflows from American markets.
Circle’s Chief Strategy Officer Dante Disparte offered full support for the agreement, referencing USDC’s expanding role in payment systems and capital markets.
Coinbase holds substantial interest in the outcome. CEO Brian Armstrong posted “Mark it up” immediately following the text release. Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal confirmed the language safeguards reward programs based on actual platform participation.
Voices from the Industry
The Crypto Council for Innovation approved the legislation while noting specific considerations. CEO Ji Hun Kim observed that the current language extends beyond last year’s GENIUS Act, which restricted only issuer-paid rewards. The updated text encompasses all digital asset market participants.
Kim nevertheless called for forward movement. “The north star is to ensure that the U.S. can lead on crypto,” he posted on X.
Senator Bernie Moreno projected CLARITY Act passage by late May. Senator Cynthia Lummis declared in April: “It’s now or never.”
The Senate Banking Committee had earlier delayed a markup session scheduled for January.

