SEC CLARITY Act Roundtable Kicks Off Today

The SEC CLARITY Act roundtable convened in Washington today, April 16, bringing regulators and industry together for a public discussion on digital asset market structure as the Senate Banking Committee targets a late-April markup of the most consequential crypto bill the US has ever seen.
Summary
- The SEC is hosting a roundtable on digital asset market structure today, not a vote or markup, but a signal of where regulators stand before Congress acts on the CLARITY Act.
- The Senate Banking Committee is targeting a late-April markup, with Chair Tim Scott yet to set a firm date as of April 15, while Senator Lummis warns a miss means waiting until at least 2030.
- White House digital assets adviser Patrick Witt said a stablecoin yield compromise “appears to be holding firm,” resolving the central dispute that has stalled the bill twice this year.
The SEC CLARITY Act roundtable opened in Washington today as the US Securities and Exchange Commission convened a public forum on digital asset market structure, placing the bill’s trajectory on full display for the first time since the Senate returned from Easter recess on April 13. Today’s session is not a vote or formal markup, but the commissioners running it are the same ones who will implement the CLARITY Act once Congress passes it.
The Senate Banking Committee markup is targeted for the second half of April. Chair Tim Scott has not yet announced a date as of Wednesday evening.
The CLARITY Act would draw a statutory line between the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, assigning digital commodities to the CFTC and leaving digital securities under SEC oversight. The House passed the bill 294 to 134 in July 2025 and the Senate Agriculture Committee cleared its version in January 2026, making this the most advanced crypto market structure bill in US history.
SEC Chair Paul Atkins has said publicly that the SEC and CFTC are operationally ready to implement the act the moment Congress passes it. Polymarket currently puts passage odds at 55%.
The Stablecoin Fight That Almost Killed the Bill
The central dispute holding up the legislation has been whether stablecoin issuers can pay yield to holders simply for holding their tokens. White House digital assets adviser Patrick Witt said the stablecoin yield compromise “appears to be holding firm,” describing it as a “must-have” for unlocking the remaining sticking points. The deal bans passive yield on stablecoin balances while permitting activity-linked rewards tied to payments and platform use, a structure that protects DeFi protocols while addressing banking industry concerns about deposit migration.
The bill has stalled twice in 2026 as House Republicans remain split over FISA reauthorization and budget reconciliation, consuming legislative bandwidth the CLARITY Act needs before midterm politics close the window entirely. Senator Cynthia Lummis wrote on X this month that this is “our last chance” until at least 2030 if Congress misses the May window.
What Passes Next Has Trillion-Dollar Stakes
JPMorgan analysts have called midyear passage a positive catalyst for digital assets. Standard Chartered estimated that an uncapped yield provision could redirect up to $500 billion in deposits out of the banking system, explaining the banking lobby’s resistance. A White House Council of Economic Advisers study countered that banning yield would increase total US bank lending by just $2.1 billion while imposing an $800 million welfare cost on households.
The bill must still clear the Senate Banking Committee, pass a full Senate floor vote requiring 60 votes, reconcile with the Agriculture Committee version and the House-passed text, and receive a presidential signature. Today’s roundtable does not shorten that path, but it signals regulators are aligned and waiting for lawmakers to act.










