The Senate Banking Committee will hold a markup hearing for the Clarity Act on March 14, a pivotal step that could reshape crypto market structure and regulatoryThe Senate Banking Committee will hold a markup hearing for the Clarity Act on March 14, a pivotal step that could reshape crypto market structure and regulatory

Senate Banking Committee’s Clarity Act Markup Brings Crypto Market Structure to the Moment

2026/05/09 12:02
6 min read
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The Markup Hearing and Why It Matters

On March 14, the Senate Banking Committee will hold a markup hearing for the Clarity Act, according to the original announcement. That date might become one of the most consequential for U.S. crypto legislation this cycle. A markup is not the same as a committee vote, but it means members are finally putting pen to text. Amendments will be proposed. Language will be fought over. And the bill will start looking like something that could actually reach the Senate floor.

For an industry that has spent years waiting for jurisdictional clarity, this hearing lands in a different Washington. House Republicans already advanced the Clarity Act through the Agriculture Committee last fall, and the Senate’s version has bipartisan co-sponsors. The momentum is real. The question now is whether the markup process strengthens the bill or loads it with enough political baggage to slow its final passage.

Clarity Act: From House Passage to Senate Showdown

The Clarity Act already has a legislative track record. In October, the House Agriculture Committee advanced the bill with a framework designed to draw a clear line between the SEC and the CFTC when it comes to digital assets. That version gave the CFTC greater oversight over spot markets while carving out a smaller zone for the SEC. The Senate Banking Committee markup now offers the first real opportunity to see how the upper chamber adjusts that structure.

The Senate bill enters a chamber where crypto is no longer an abstract policy debate. Senators have watched trading volumes shift, ETF approvals reshape flows, and institutions slowly reposition portfolios around crypto as a sector-based asset class. The legislation now carries weight beyond a single hearing room. What gets marked up on March 14 will be measured against real market structure, not just political rhetoric.

Political Calculus: Bipartisan Language and Partisan Resistance

The Clarity Act has always been built around a bet that enough Democrats will accept a regulated digital asset market if it means ending the enforcement-first era. That bet is being tested. Elizabeth Warren has already signaled a fight over the broader market structure framework, and she is not alone. The markup will reveal whether the bipartisan language holds or fractures under pressure.

One dynamic to watch is how the committee handles stablecoin provisions. The Clarity Act addresses payment stablecoins only tangentially, but that issue has become a political flashpoint in recent weeks. If senators try to load stablecoin oversight amendments onto the markup, it could complicate the bill’s path. A targeted market structure bill might pass; a sprawling omnibus might not.

At the same time, committee dynamics are shifting. Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott has indicated he wants a bill that can get to the floor without a prolonged intra-party fight. That suggests a disciplined markup where amendments are limited to what can survive a broader Senate vote. The Clarity Act’s core framework—CFTC jurisdiction for most spot assets, SEC carve-outs, and a clear registration path—remains the spine of the legislation.

Market Structure Under a New Regulatory Regime

A final Clarity Act would not just end the jurisdictional ambiguity. It would change how crypto markets are built. Exchanges would need to register, custody requirements would standardize, and institutional trading desks would finally have a clear compliance manual. That alone could reshape liquidity. Right now, a portion of institutional capital sits on the sidelines because the regulatory path is too uncertain. A signed law would unlock that.

The impact would ripple through Bitcoin and Ethereum markets first, but the downstream effects would touch DeFi protocols, tokenization platforms, and the infrastructure layers that connect them. The bill’s definitions matter enormously. If the SEC retains authority over assets deemed securities under the Howey test while the CFTC governs everything else, a large swath of altcoins could fall into a gray zone. The markup is where those definitions are fought over.

There is also a practical market effect. The mere perception that Congress is moving toward a workable framework tends to compress volatility, not because uncertainty disappears, but because the worst-case enforcement scenarios get priced out. The March 14 markup will be watched by trading desks, market makers, and risk managers more closely than any policy event in months.

Liquidity, Institutional Flows, and the Regulatory Overhang

Regulatory clarity does not exist in isolation. The markup comes as Bitcoin supply dynamics are tightening, ETF net flows are picking up again, and long-term holders are showing conviction. The regulatory overhang has been a persistent friction. Removing it would not cause a sudden price surge—markets rarely work that linearly—but it would reframe the risk premium that has been embedded in crypto assets for years.

Institutional participation depends on this framework. Pension funds, sovereign wealth managers, and large asset allocators do not enter markets where the legal status of the underlying asset changes every time a new enforcement action drops. The Clarity Act addresses that at its root. For the first time, digital assets would be treated as a defined class with defined regulators. That may sound procedural, but it is the difference between running a regulated business and running a legal experiment.

BTCUSA Insight

The Senate Banking Committee markup is not just another hearing. It is the moment the Clarity Act stops being a legislative press release and starts being a bill with teeth. Everything that matters—the SEC-CFTC line, the stablecoin carve-outs, the bipartisan math—will be tested in real time. Crypto has learned to be skeptical of Washington’s promises, but this one is different. A markup with real amendments and a disciplined chairman is a signal that the legislative machinery is finally moving. What emerges on March 14 will set the template for how digital asset markets operate in the United States for years. That is not hype; it is structural. And it matters more than any enforcement action, ETF filing, or quarterly flow report the market has processed this year.

<p>The post Senate Banking Committee’s Clarity Act Markup Brings Crypto Market Structure to the Moment first appeared on Crypto News And Market Updates | BTCUSA.</p>

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