The warning from the crypto industry is becoming blunt: the United States is losing the regulatory race, and Europe is picking up the slack. Following a closed-door meeting with the Senate Banking Committee on March 23, industry leaders are signaling that further delays to the CLARITY Act could permanently damage American competitiveness.
While the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) framework is already operational, providing clear rules of the road, the U.S. remains stuck in committee debates. The frustration is palpable. Industry experts argue that every month the U.S. delays, capital and innovation migrate to jurisdictions where the rules are actually written down.
Senators Thom Tillis (R-NC) and Angela Alsobrooks (D-MD) have reportedly struck a White House-backed compromise regarding stablecoin rewards to break the deadlock. But with the 2026 midterm election cycle looming, the window to turn this compromise into law is closing rapidly.
The Regulatory Gap: MiCA vs. The Stalled U.S. Approach
To understand why the industry is sounding the alarm, you have to look at the difference in playing fields. Europe’s MiCA framework is like a paved highway with posted speed limits. Companies know exactly what they can and cannot do.
In contrast, the U.S. landscape is currently an off-road track. The CLARITY Act is an attempt to pave that road, specifically for stablecoins and digital assets, but it keeps hitting roadblocks. The primary friction point has been “yield,” or interest earned on stablecoins.
Traditional banks are terrified of this. They fear that if stablecoin issuers can offer high-yield rewards on digital dollars, customers will pull their deposits out of commercial banks en masse. For European regulators, this cat is already out of the bag as the ECB deals with similar stablecoin alarms, but they have a framework to manage it. The U.S. is still debating whether to allow it at all.
EXPERT: CLARITY ACT FINEPRINT “NOT WHAT THE INDUSTRY WAS HOPING FOR”
The CEO of leading crypto platform @coinbureau, @nicrypto, explained in a recent post that, following a recent deal among lawmakers regarding the upcoming CLARITY Act…
“Banks won the argument”
He referred… pic.twitter.com/rH04H2vZxs
— BSCN (@BSCNews) March 25, 2026
The new bipartisan compromise attempts to thread this needle. It establishes a strict boundary: you cannot earn interest simply for holding a token (idle balance yield), but you can earn rewards for utility—such as using the token for payments or engaged platform activity.
Why Companies Are Threatening to Leave Over CLARITY Act Delays?
The stakes here are not theoretical. Michael Treacy, Commercial Director at Openpayd, noted that while delays don’t necessarily mean failure, they force companies to look for “greater regulatory certainty.” In plain English, businesses hate guessing.
If a crypto firm has to choose between a jurisdiction where they might get sued by the SEC and one where they have a clear license to operate, they choose the latter. This is exactly what the “Lose Ground to MiCA” warning is about. Europe offers a license; the U.S. currently offers a subpoena.
Say goodbye to Uniswap as you know it.
The Senate’s new CLARITY Act is a direct hit on DeFi, engineered to protect the banks.
They are outright banning passive stablecoin yield. Banks are terrified lawmakers with projections of a $6.6 trillion deposit flight to crypto, so…
— Heidi (@blockchainchick) March 24, 2026
This reality is driving intense lobbying. President Trump recently met privately with Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong, who has publicly criticized banks for blocking progress. While the broader Trump crypto agenda pushes for aggressive deregulation, the legislative gears are grinding slowly.
To appease banking lobbyists, Senator Cynthia Lummis (R-WY) confirmed that traditional banking terms like “deposit” and “interest” are being scrubbed from the bill’s text. The goal is to ensure digital assets are never marketed as direct competitors to your savings account, even if they function similarly.
What Is Actually Blocking the CLARITY Act Bill
The obstacle now is the calendar. The Senate Banking Committee is targeting a markup session for the second half of April, right after the Easter recess. This is the critical bottleneck.
The Senate schedule is currently congested with debates over government funding and the SAVE America Act. These priority items threaten to push the crypto markup off the docket. Senator Bernie Moreno (R-OH) has issued a blunt deadline warning regarding the midterms: if the CLARITY Act does not reach the Senate floor by May, it risks being sidelined indefinitely.
Three weeks ago I said the CLARITY Act had a deadline.
If it doesn’t clear the Senate Banking Committee by end of April it’s dead until 2027.
Yesterday, the stablecoin yield deal happened.
Senators + the White House reached a compromise on the exact issue that’s been blocking…
— Nic (@nicrypto) March 21, 2026
Once the 2026 midterm campaigns kick into high gear this summer, passing complex financial legislation becomes nearly impossible. The political capital simply evaporates.
The Signals That Will Decide the Race
We are watching the Senate Banking Committee’s schedule for late April closely. If the markup happens and the compromise language on “utility rewards” survives, the U.S. gets back in the race.
However, if the markup is delayed into May, or if the banking lobby succeeds in stripping out non-idle rewards entirely, expect a chill in the U.S. market. Capital flows to where it is treated best.
Right now, that flow is pointing toward Europe. The timing is hard to ignore. If Congress misses this window, the U.S. spends another two years in regulatory limbo while MiCA sets the global standard. Draw your own conclusions.
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