US Crypto Market Structure Bill Remains in Legislative Limbo
The CLARITY Act — Washington's most consequential attempt yet to define a regulatory framework for digital assets — is caught in a standoff between the traditional banking sector and the crypto industry. For derivatives traders, regulatory uncertainty of this magnitude has historically translated into compressed open interest, elevated funding rate volatility, and a risk-off posture across major perpetual markets.
At an American Bankers Association (ABA) summit in Washington, D.C., Democratic Senator Angela Alsobrooks acknowledged the friction directly, noting that both sides of the negotiation are expected to walk away "just a little bit unhappy." She is co-sponsoring compromise language alongside Republican Senator Thom Tillis of North Carolina, with the stated goal of installing guardrails that prevent deposit flight while preserving room for financial innovation.
How Does This Affect BTC and ETH Perpetual Markets?
Regulatory gridlock around stablecoins is not a neutral event for perpetual futures markets. Stablecoins — primarily USDT and USDC — function as the primary collateral and settlement layer across virtually every major derivatives venue. Any legislative action that constrains stablecoin issuance, restricts yield-bearing stablecoin products, or introduces compliance overhead for issuers could reduce liquidity depth in perp markets, widen bid-ask spreads, and increase the cost of maintaining leveraged positions.
As of Q2 2025, the total crypto market capitalization sits at approximately $2.36 trillion, with BTC and ETH perpetual open interest accounting for a substantial share of on-exchange derivatives volume. A prolonged legislative impasse tends to suppress institutional participation — the cohort most sensitive to regulatory risk — which can flatten funding rates and reduce the frequency of meaningful long/short squeezes.
If the CLARITY Act advances through the Senate Banking Committee markup and is subsequently merged with the version already cleared by the Senate Agriculture Committee, the resulting clarity could act as a structural catalyst for renewed institutional inflows. Historically, regulatory resolution — even imperfect resolution — has been more constructive for crypto asset prices than open-ended uncertainty.
ABA Survey Data: Stablecoin Adoption Is Still Marginal
The ABA released survey data at the summit that carries direct implications for market structure. Key figures include:
90%of respondents do not currently hold any stablecoin.80%have never held a stablecoin at any point.- Only
17%indicated they were likely to buy or use stablecoins within the next twelve months. 42%of consumers support a congressional ban on stablecoin issuers offering interest or rewards if such features are deemed to threaten bank lending capacity.- Consumers favor cautious regulatory action by a margin of
6-to-1when asked whether Congress should avoid undermining the existing financial system — particularly community banks — as it writes digital asset rules.
For traders, the low adoption numbers cut both ways. On one hand, they suggest the systemic risk argument being advanced by the banking lobby is largely theoretical at current scale. On the other hand, a 42% consumer approval rating for outright bans on stablecoin rewards gives legislators political cover to impose restrictions that could structurally disadvantage crypto-native yield products — including those used as collateral in DeFi-adjacent perpetual platforms.
Legislative Path Forward
Senator Tillis' vote remains the pivotal variable. If Senate Democrats hold unified opposition to the bill's core provisions, Tillis' support becomes the deciding factor in whether the legislation clears committee. President Trump has publicly aligned with the crypto sector's position, adding executive-branch pressure to the timeline. The next formal checkpoint is the Senate Banking Committee markup hearing — a date that has not yet been confirmed as of this writing.
Should the bill stall past Q3 2025, traders should anticipate continued regulatory ambiguity as a persistent headwind for altcoin perpetual markets, where speculative positioning is most sensitive to macro-level policy signals.
Trading Implications
- Stablecoin liquidity risk: Legislative restrictions on stablecoin rewards or issuance could reduce collateral availability across major perp venues, widening spreads and increasing margin costs for leveraged positions.
- Funding rate suppression: Prolonged regulatory uncertainty tends to reduce institutional participation, which flattens funding rates and dampens the frequency of high-conviction directional squeezes in BTC and ETH perps.
- Catalyst watch: A successful Senate Banking Committee markup would likely trigger a short-term bullish impulse across major perpetual pairs — watch for open interest expansion and positive funding rate shifts as leading indicators of institutional re-entry.
- Altcoin exposure: Altcoin perp markets carry elevated regulatory beta here. Traders holding leveraged long exposure in lower-cap assets should monitor bill progress closely and consider tighter stop placements around key committee dates.
- Adoption data as a baseline: With stablecoin ownership at
10%of surveyed consumers and forward intent at17%, the market is still in early-adoption territory — meaning regulatory outcomes here will shape the structural ceiling for stablecoin-collateralized derivatives growth over the next cycle.