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“We Agree to Disagree” — Tillis and Brooks Push CLARITY Act

Senators Tillis and Brooks finalized the CLARITY Act stablecoin yield compromise. Discover how Section 404 impacts bank deposit competition.

“We Agree to Disagree” — Tillis and Brooks Push CLARITY Act

Quick Take

Summary is AI generated, newsroom reviewed.

  • Senators Tillis and Alsobrooks finalized the Section 404 compromise today, ending months of debate over stablecoin yields.

  • The agreement bans bank-style deposit interest while protecting activity-based rewards for crypto platform users.

  • Lawmakers rejected further banking industry pushback, moving the bill toward a mid-May Senate Banking Committee markup.

  • The deal clarifies SEC and CFTC roles, providing the regulatory certainty needed for institutional capital entry in 2026.

The stablecoin yield debate just hit a turning point. On May 5, 2026, Senators Thom Tillis and Angela Alsobrooks released a joint statement. It confirms their bipartisan compromise on Section 404 of the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act is final. 

The message to banking trade groups pushing back against the deal was direct and unambiguous. “We respectfully agree to disagree.” Clarity Act news today signals that one of the last major roadblocks to a Senate Banking Committee markup has been removed.

What the Senators Actually Agreed On

The compromise sits at a carefully drawn line between two competing interests. On one side, traditional banks have spent months raising alarms about deposit flight. The fear that customers would move savings into stablecoin reward programs offering bank-style returns. On the other side, crypto firms argued that activity-based rewards are fundamentally different from deposit interest and should remain protected.

The final Section 404 language addresses both concerns. It prohibits stablecoin rewards that function like interest on bank deposits. At the same time, it explicitly preserves the ability for crypto companies to offer other forms of customer rewards tied to real platform activity.

Joint statement by Senators Thom Tillis (R-NC) and Angela Alsobrooks (D-MD)

In their joint statement, the senators were clear about the outcome. “Our compromise prohibits stablecoin rewards from resembling interest on bank deposits,” they wrote. “Our compromise also allows crypto companies to offer other forms of customer rewards. Most importantly, it helps put us on a bipartisan path to pass the CLARITY Act, providing the regulatory certainty needed to foster innovation.”

That final line carries real weight. Regulatory certainty has been the missing ingredient holding institutional crypto adoption back for years.

Banking Industry Pushback Did Not Change the Outcome

Despite months of direct engagement with banking trade groups, the senators held firm. Their statement acknowledged that the industry had “a seat at the table” throughout the process. Feedback was heard. Adjustments were made. But the core framework survived intact. The Crypto Clarity Act compromise is built on a simple principle, let the perfect not become the enemy of the good. Some banking groups may still oppose the deal. The senators made clear that opposition will not reopen negotiations.

What This Means for Investors and Developers

For investors, this is a meaningful catalyst moment. The Clarity Act 2026, advancing toward markup, removes one of the biggest regulatory uncertainty discounts priced into crypto markets. Clearer rules historically bring institutional capital off the sidelines. Stablecoin infrastructure plays, exchange tokens, and tokenized asset platforms all stand to benefit from a defined legal framework.

For developers, the Clarity Act crypto framework matters beyond stablecoins. The broader Digital Asset Market Clarity Act clarifies SEC and CFTC jurisdiction over digital assets. That clarity determines where developers can build, what products they can launch, and which regulatory body they answer to. A Senate Banking Committee markup is now targeted for mid-May. Watch that date closely. It may be the most important regulatory moment for crypto in 2026.

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Senator Thom Tillis
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