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The crypto industry has been asking for one thing from Washington for years: clear rules. A bill that could deliver exactly that is inching closer - but it keeps getting delayed by the same fight.
The latest version of the crypto market structure bill was expected to be released this week. It wasn't. Legislative staffers are still working through revised compromise language on one key issue - whether stablecoin issuers can pay yield to holders.
The proposed compromise bans yield based solely on stablecoin balances. But it does allow companies to pay out yield based on "activities" - a distinction that has created confusion across both the crypto and banking industries.
Industry groups reviewed the revised language this week and flagged concerns. The crypto side worries the definitions are too narrow. Banks worry they're too broad. Neither side has signed off yet.
Beyond stablecoin yield, the bill still needs to settle how decentralized finance gets regulated - and whether it will address President Trump's family involvement with various crypto projects.
The market structure bill would be the first comprehensive federal framework for crypto regulation in the United States. Without it, crypto companies operate under a patchwork of state laws and enforcement actions.
A clear rulebook would give institutional investors the confidence to deploy more capital into the space. It would also set the ground rules for how exchanges, custodians, and token issuers operate going forward.
Senators have said negotiations are advancing. Senate Banking Committee Chair Tim Scott has expressed confidence in the process. But the bill has been "close" before.
The timeline keeps slipping. The original target was early spring. Now the most optimistic estimates point to a possible vote by midsummer.
For investors, the bill's passage would be a major signal. Regulatory clarity is the single biggest thing standing between crypto and the next wave of mainstream adoption.
Every delay keeps that uncertainty priced into the market.
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