The bill that was supposed to give the crypto industry its regulatory foundation is in danger.
JPMorgan analysts led by managing director Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou issued a warning on Wednesday that the CLARITY Act faces a “narrowing path to passage” before the 2026 midterm elections. The bank had previously said the bill would act as a positive catalyst for crypto markets in the second half of the year. Now it’s questioning whether the bill gets passed at all.
The problem isn’t opposition to crypto regulation in principle. It’s a specific fight over one provision that has turned the banking industry and the crypto industry into open enemies: stablecoin yield.
Jamie Dimon declared war on the provision last week, calling Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong dishonest, warning the system would “blow up,” and pledging that banks would not accept the bill as written. Treasury Secretary Bessent pressed lawmakers to “get behind” the legislation. The Blockchain Association sent a letter to Senate leadership signed by 160 former national security officials urging passage.
Everyone agrees the bill matters. Nobody agrees on what it should say. And the clock is running out.
The Stablecoin Yield Dispute Explained
The fight centres on whether crypto platforms should be allowed to pay customers for holding stablecoins.
Right now, stablecoin issuers like Circle and Tether earn billions in interest by investing customer deposits in Treasury bonds. They keep all of that yield. The customer gets a $1 token. The issuer earns 4% to 5% on the reserves and pockets the difference.
The CLARITY Act, in its current form, would allow platforms to pass some of that yield back to customers through “activity-based rewards.” Not passive interest like a bank account, but rewards tied to platform engagement.
Dimon’s argument is that the distinction is meaningless. If a customer earns 4% by holding USDC on Coinbase, it functions like a deposit regardless of what you call it. And if crypto platforms can offer that return without holding bank-level capital reserves, facing FDIC obligations, or submitting to the same supervisory oversight that banks endure, consumers are at risk and banks lose deposits.
The banking industry estimates that stablecoin yield could drain up to $6 trillion from traditional bank deposits into digital alternatives. That’s not a small number. It’s roughly a third of all deposits in the US banking system. The threat is existential enough to have united JPMorgan, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, and Citigroup in opposition.
The crypto industry’s counter-argument is equally forceful. Banks pay depositors 0.5% while earning 5% on those deposits. Stablecoins would give consumers a better deal. The banking industry’s opposition isn’t about consumer protection. It’s about protecting a profit margin that exists because consumers have no alternative.
Both sides are right about different things. The question for senators is which concern outweighs the other.
The Calendar Problem
Even if the stablecoin yield dispute gets resolved, the legislative calendar is working against the bill.
Congress has roughly four working weeks in June and three in July before the August recess. During that time, the Senate also needs to address FISA reauthorisation, a housing bill that passed the House, and the reconciliation process. The CLARITY Act is competing for floor time against multiple other priorities.
Senator Cynthia Lummis said Senate action on the bill may not occur until August. That pushes the timeline dangerously close to the midterm election campaign period, when lawmakers become reluctant to take controversial votes that could be used against them by opponents.
JPMorgan’s analysts noted that a bill negotiated before the midterms could look substantially different from one considered afterward, particularly if control of Congress changes. That uncertainty makes it harder for the crypto industry to plan around the legislation and harder for institutional investors to price in its passage.
The White House has been pushing for a July 4 target. That deadline now looks unrealistic. The question is whether the delay extends to August, to after the midterms, or to the next Congress entirely.
What Happens If the Bill Fails
The consequences of failure extend far beyond Washington politics.
Standard Chartered’s projection of $4 to $8 billion in additional XRP ETF inflows depends on the CLARITY Act passing. Galaxy Research’s 75% passage probability is already priced into altcoin valuations. The entire institutional case for tokens like XRP, which would be formally classified as a digital commodity under the bill, rests on the legislation becoming law.
If the bill stalls or dies, the regulatory uncertainty that has held back institutional crypto investment for years remains unresolved. Tokens that rallied on CLARITY Act optimism would give back those gains. The $1.5 billion in XRP ETF inflows that arrived partly on the expectation of regulatory clarity would face the question of whether to stay or exit.
Former Senator Lummis warned that failure before the midterms could mean waiting until 2030. A new Congress would need to restart the legislative process from scratch. Committee hearings, drafting, markup, committee votes, floor votes, reconciliation with the House, all of it would need to happen again with different lawmakers who may have different priorities.
For an industry that has been waiting years for comprehensive market structure legislation, the prospect of another four-year delay would be devastating for sentiment and institutional confidence.
The Two Paths Forward
JPMorgan outlined two scenarios for how the stablecoin yield dispute resolves, and each produces different market outcomes.
In the first scenario, lawmakers impose effective restrictions on passive stablecoin yield. That would disappoint crypto-native firms that have been pushing for yield-bearing stablecoins. But the bill would still pass, providing the regulatory framework that institutional investors need. The bank expects that idle crypto capital would flow toward tokenised Treasuries, digital money-market funds, and tokenised deposits instead, benefiting companies like Ondo, Paxos, and SoFi rather than pure stablecoin issuers.
In the second scenario, the stablecoin yield provision becomes a deal-breaker. Banks lobby hard enough to strip it entirely or attach requirements that make it unworkable. Crypto firms pull support in response, just as Coinbase did in January when the original draft banned yield outright. Without industry support, the bill loses momentum and dies.
The compromise that emerged after January’s collapse allows “activity-based rewards” while banning “passive yield.” That distinction satisfied enough stakeholders to clear the Banking Committee 15-9. Whether it survives the floor vote with Dimon actively pressuring every senator who values banking industry campaign contributions is the central question.
JPMorgan’s own position creates an irony worth noting. The bank’s analysts are warning that the bill might fail while its CEO is one of the primary forces working to ensure it does. Whether JPMorgan wants the CLARITY Act to pass in a modified form or fail entirely isn’t clear from the public statements. What’s clear is that Dimon has made this personal in a way that CEOs of the world’s largest bank rarely do.
What Crypto Investors Should Watch
Three signals will tell you whether the CLARITY Act survives or dies.
First, watch for a scheduled floor vote date. Until Senate leadership commits to putting the bill on the calendar for debate, everything else is speculation. A confirmed vote date would be the strongest signal that the bill has enough support to pass.
Second, watch the amendment process. Over 100 amendments have been proposed. The ones that matter most deal with stablecoin yield, crypto asset classification, and whether federal officials can hold digital assets. If the yield provision survives amendments intact, the bill advances. If it gets stripped or weakened beyond what the crypto industry will accept, support collapses.
Third, watch Coinbase’s public position. The company pulled support once before when yield was banned. If Coinbase signals it will oppose or withdraw support for the current version, the coalition behind the bill fractures. If Armstrong continues backing it despite Dimon’s attacks, the coalition holds.
The CLARITY Act cleared the Banking Committee with bipartisan support. It was placed on the Senate Legislative Calendar. The White House wants it passed. 160 former national security officials signed a letter supporting it. The procedural path exists.
Whether the political will survives the banking lobby, the midterm calendar, and Jamie Dimon’s very personal campaign against Brian Armstrong will be determined in the next six to eight weeks. For an industry that has waited years for this moment, the wait isn’t over yet.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.


















