As the Senate Banking Committee prepares to mark up the long-anticipated CLARITY Act on Thursday, Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong has argued that the newest version of the bill represents a workable “compromise” and could meaningfully improve the US financial system.
Speaking to FOX Business, Armstrong said the updated draft reflects concessions on both sides—what he described as the crypto industry meeting requests from bank lobbyists and lawmakers, while the banking sector also gave ground during negotiations.
Armstrong also highlighted one specific element tied to stablecoin rewards. He said the approach in the latest bill would only apply when there is “some sort of material activity on the account,” adding that he believes the overall package would make the system “more efficient.”
The claim is that the legislation would help streamline financial services, reduce friction, and make access easier for consumers and businesses—while still keeping the framework aligned with banking-sector concerns that were raised during talks.
Still, critics point to the banking industry’s pushback as evidence that the dispute is far from settled. As reported throughout the week by Bitcoinist, banking trade groups have opposed the CLARITY Act’s stablecoin-rewards provision, arguing that it could give crypto firms too much flexibility.
Their position is that the policy might also encourage deposits to shift away from traditional, insured banking channels rather than strengthening them.
Beyond the details of stablecoin rules, Coinbase CEO argued that the broader direction of the CLARITY Act reflects growing institutional interest in digital assets.
In his view, banks are increasingly integrating stablecoins and crypto-related services because customer demand is rising—an angle that suggests the bill, if passed in its current form, could provide the clearer structure institutions want before expanding further.
Supporters of the bill are not limited to Coinbase. Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse also backed the current push, commenting on social media site X (previously Twitter) that the Senate Banking Committee is “putting in the work” to move the CLARITY Act forward.
Garlinghouse’s message emphasized that Ripple supports the bill because crypto businesses and major participants should have the “same rules and protections as every other asset class,” and because—if the US is serious about leading in crypto—this is the moment to finalize legislation and get it done.
Even with that backing, the legislative road ahead is not smooth. Politico reported that Senator Elizabeth Warren, a well-known crypto skeptic, is vowing to pursue extensive changes to the bill through amendments.
The reporting says Warren and others are preparing more than 100 amendments ahead of the markup, following the release of an updated 309-page draft that expands on an earlier 278-page version introduced in January.
According to the same reporting, Warren submitted more than 40 amendments on her own, with much of the rest attributed to Democratic members of the Banking Committee.
This mirrors earlier moves around the bill: the January markup session drew 137 amendments, and it was eventually cancelled after a period of resistance that included Armstrong and Coinbase withdrawing support for the bill at the time.
For now, the core question going into Thursday’s markup is whether the latest CLARITY Act draft can hold together.
Featured image created with OpenArt, chart from TradingView.com