Patrick Witt, executive director of the President’s Council of Advisors for Digital Assets and the White House’s chief crypto adviser, said on Monday that negotiations on the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act have advanced well beyond the stablecoin yield impasse, with multiple outstanding issues being resolved in parallel behind the scenes.
The signal is the clearest indication yet that a federal regulatory floor for payment stablecoins is within legislative reach.
The question isn’t whether the White House wants this bill passed. It clearly does. The question is whether the Senate Banking Committee can hold a markup hearing before the political window closes, analysts warn that missing a May 2026 advancement deadline risks pushing the entire legislative effort past the November midterms.
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The core structural shift embedded in the Clarity Act is the establishment of a federal minimum standard , a regulatory floor, that all payment stablecoin issuers must meet regardless of their state charter status.
Before this framework, issuers operated under a patchwork of state money transmission licenses with no unified federal reserve, capital, or transparency requirements.
That ambiguity has been the primary barrier preventing institutional adoption at scale for settlement and cash management.
Under the proposed framework, issuers would be required to maintain 1:1 reserve backing with high-quality liquid assets, meet federal safety-and-soundness standards, and comply with AML and illicit finance controls, including, critically, new DeFi-specific protections that Witt confirmed are still being finalized.
The DeFi provisions are not cosmetic. They determine whether decentralized protocols that route stablecoin liquidity face issuer-level compliance obligations or are treated as distinct actors, a distinction that shapes the entire secondary market architecture for USDC and its competitors.
The Federal Reserve dimension carries the highest institutional stakes.
Negotiations are reportedly centering on whether the Fed retains override authority over state-regulated issuers, a mechanism that would function as a systemic risk check but would also effectively give the central bank leverage over which issuers can access federal payment rails.
For Circle, that access would reduce counterparty risk at the settlement layer and open institutional corridors currently closed to non-bank entities.
Deputy Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has publicly urged rapid spring 2026 passage, citing midterm urgency, a signal that Treasury views this not as incremental cleanup but as foundational market infrastructure legislation.

The stablecoin yield compromise, reached between key senators from both parties, addresses what banks had framed as an existential threat to their deposit base.
Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan warned in February that trillions in deposits could migrate to yield-bearing stablecoins if Congress authorized interest-like returns.
Witt proposed language at ETHDenver in February limiting stablecoin rewards to “activities or transactions” rather than balances, with violations penalized up to $500,000 per day, a formulation that appears to have formed the basis of the current bipartisan compromise.
This dynamic mirrors what’s unfolding in Japan’s reclassification of crypto as a financial instrument, where the core legislative tension also centered on where digital assets fit within existing banking and payment system hierarchies.
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