The Senate Banking Committee voted to advance the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act on Thursday, May 14, 2026, which marks a significant step toward establishing a federal framework for crypto regulation in the United States.
The committee approved the 309-page draft released earlier this week, which would formally divide oversight of digital assets between the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC). The bill now moves to the full Senate floor, where it will require 60 votes to advance.
- CLARITY Act: Can Washington Keep Both Crypto and Banks Happy?
- What Is the CLARITY Act? The US Crypto Bill That Could Reshape Digital Asset Regulation This Week
A detailed breakdown of the CLARITY Act and its proposed SEC-CFTC split is available in Finance Magnates’ explainer published ahead of the vote. The vote followed months of negotiations over stablecoin yield restrictions, DeFi oversight, and ethics rules barring government officials from holding crypto assets.
BREAKING: 🇺🇸 Senate Banking Committee PASSES the Clarity Act in 15-9 vote.
The bill now goes to the full Senate. pic.twitter.com/TCs6T283y2
— Bitcoin Magazine (@BitcoinMagazine) May 14, 2026
The CLARITY Act passed the House in July 2025 with bipartisan support in a 294-134 vote. A separate crypto market structure bill cleared the Senate Agriculture Committee in January 2026, meaning the two versions will still need to be reconciled before final passage. Even if ultimately signed into law, the framework would still require extensive SEC-CFTC rulemaking before becoming fully operational.
CLARITY Act Lifts Crypto Sentiment
Following the CLARITY Act’s progress, crypto prices are
flashing a cautiously risk‑on response, with majors grinding
higher rather than exploding upward. Bitcoin is up 2% on the day, bringing
weekly gains to about 1.6%, while Ethereum’s
2% daily rise shows it is largely tracking BTC’s
improving tone as investors re‑price regulatory risk instead of
fleeing the market.
A screenshot of crypto price action, Source: CoinMarketCap
Following this regulatory shift, traders are rotating more
aggressively into narrative‑driven names: XRP is the biggest
gainer among the top coins, jumping 7% on the daily chart and 9% on the week,
signaling renewed enthusiasm for payment‑ and banking‑linked
tokens. Dogecoin’s 3% daily move and 7% weekly
gain show that memecoin appetite is returning, but in a measured way.
Crypto Industry Applauds Senate Committee
Reacting to the CLARITY Act’s passage, Coinbase CEO Brian
Armstrong highlighted that the crypto market structure bill has cleared the
Senate Banking Committee with bipartisan support, calling it a historic moment
for digital assets in the United States.
Keep reading: CLARITY Act: Can Washington Keep Both Crypto and Banks Happy?
“Historic day for crypto and for the future of digital assets
in America. Grateful for the countless hours from lawmakers and staff to
strengthen this legislation. Big improvement from where we were in January on
rewards, tokenization, DeFi, and CFTC authority. I’m proud we stood up for our
customers in that moment, and the bill is better because of it.”
The crypto market structure bill has PASSED the Senate Banking Committee with a bi-partisan vote!
Historic day for crypto and for the future of digital assets in America. Grateful for the countless hours from lawmakers and staff to strengthen this legislation. Big improvement…
— Brian Armstrong (@brian_armstrong) May 14, 2026
“Looking forward to a bipartisan law that cements the US as
the world’s crypto capital. Let’s get CLARITY done”
What Happens Next?
Next, the CLARITY Act heads from the Senate Banking
Committee to the full Senate, where it needs to clear a 60‑vote
hurdle before lawmakers can reconcile it with the version the House passed in
2025.
If the Senate approves its own text, negotiators from both
chambers will have to iron out differences, especially
around stablecoins, DeFi, and ethics rules, into
a single compromise bill that both the House and Senate can vote on again.
Only after that unified bill passes both chambers would it
go to President Trump’s desk for signature, followed by a lengthy phase of SEC
and CFTC rulemaking to translate the high‑level framework into detailed
regulations that markets and companies can actually operate under.
The Senate Banking Committee voted to advance the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act on Thursday, May 14, 2026, which marks a significant step toward establishing a federal framework for crypto regulation in the United States.
The committee approved the 309-page draft released earlier this week, which would formally divide oversight of digital assets between the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC). The bill now moves to the full Senate floor, where it will require 60 votes to advance.
- CLARITY Act: Can Washington Keep Both Crypto and Banks Happy?
- What Is the CLARITY Act? The US Crypto Bill That Could Reshape Digital Asset Regulation This Week
A detailed breakdown of the CLARITY Act and its proposed SEC-CFTC split is available in Finance Magnates’ explainer published ahead of the vote. The vote followed months of negotiations over stablecoin yield restrictions, DeFi oversight, and ethics rules barring government officials from holding crypto assets.
BREAKING: 🇺🇸 Senate Banking Committee PASSES the Clarity Act in 15-9 vote.
The bill now goes to the full Senate. pic.twitter.com/TCs6T283y2
— Bitcoin Magazine (@BitcoinMagazine) May 14, 2026
The CLARITY Act passed the House in July 2025 with bipartisan support in a 294-134 vote. A separate crypto market structure bill cleared the Senate Agriculture Committee in January 2026, meaning the two versions will still need to be reconciled before final passage. Even if ultimately signed into law, the framework would still require extensive SEC-CFTC rulemaking before becoming fully operational.
CLARITY Act Lifts Crypto Sentiment
Following the CLARITY Act’s progress, crypto prices are
flashing a cautiously risk‑on response, with majors grinding
higher rather than exploding upward. Bitcoin is up 2% on the day, bringing
weekly gains to about 1.6%, while Ethereum’s
2% daily rise shows it is largely tracking BTC’s
improving tone as investors re‑price regulatory risk instead of
fleeing the market.
A screenshot of crypto price action, Source: CoinMarketCap
Following this regulatory shift, traders are rotating more
aggressively into narrative‑driven names: XRP is the biggest
gainer among the top coins, jumping 7% on the daily chart and 9% on the week,
signaling renewed enthusiasm for payment‑ and banking‑linked
tokens. Dogecoin’s 3% daily move and 7% weekly
gain show that memecoin appetite is returning, but in a measured way.
Crypto Industry Applauds Senate Committee
Reacting to the CLARITY Act’s passage, Coinbase CEO Brian
Armstrong highlighted that the crypto market structure bill has cleared the
Senate Banking Committee with bipartisan support, calling it a historic moment
for digital assets in the United States.
Keep reading: CLARITY Act: Can Washington Keep Both Crypto and Banks Happy?
“Historic day for crypto and for the future of digital assets
in America. Grateful for the countless hours from lawmakers and staff to
strengthen this legislation. Big improvement from where we were in January on
rewards, tokenization, DeFi, and CFTC authority. I’m proud we stood up for our
customers in that moment, and the bill is better because of it.”
The crypto market structure bill has PASSED the Senate Banking Committee with a bi-partisan vote!
Historic day for crypto and for the future of digital assets in America. Grateful for the countless hours from lawmakers and staff to strengthen this legislation. Big improvement…
— Brian Armstrong (@brian_armstrong) May 14, 2026
“Looking forward to a bipartisan law that cements the US as
the world’s crypto capital. Let’s get CLARITY done”
What Happens Next?
Next, the CLARITY Act heads from the Senate Banking
Committee to the full Senate, where it needs to clear a 60‑vote
hurdle before lawmakers can reconcile it with the version the House passed in
2025.
If the Senate approves its own text, negotiators from both
chambers will have to iron out differences, especially
around stablecoins, DeFi, and ethics rules, into
a single compromise bill that both the House and Senate can vote on again.
Only after that unified bill passes both chambers would it
go to President Trump’s desk for signature, followed by a lengthy phase of SEC
and CFTC rulemaking to translate the high‑level framework into detailed
regulations that markets and companies can actually operate under.





