The average Bitcoin retail investor who recently discovered crypto might never have considered a stablecoin that pays yield on an idle balance. That fight, buried inside Senate negotiations over the CLARITY Act, is about to matter to them anyway.
Politico reported this week that senators and White House advisers have reached an agreement in principle on stablecoin-yield language, which was the main reason why the bill had stalled.
The reported agreement moves CLARITY from frozen to potentially alive again, which connects directly to Bitcoin's institutional demand story.
A timeline graphic traces the CLARITY Act's stall over stablecoin-yield language from January 2026 through this week's reported agreement in principle.Why this particular fight was the blockage
The CLARITY Act would do something no agency interpretation can: write permanent federal rules governing how crypto exchanges, brokers, dealers, and custodians operate, and hand the CFTC formal spot-market authority.
SEC Chair Paul Atkins has repeatedly said on Mar. 17 that no Commission action can future-proof the crypto rulebook the way legislation can. The message embedded in both moments was that the agency guidance is a bridge, and the statute is the destination.
The stablecoin-yield clause became the bridge's weak point.
Banks warned that crypto firms offering rewards on stablecoin balances could pull deposits away from the traditional banking system. Standard Chartered estimated stablecoins could drain roughly $500 billion from US bank deposits by the end of 2028.
That framing gave Senate opponents a credible systemic-risk argument, and the bill stalled through February and into March despite bipartisan interest in the broader market structure framework.
Senate Banking Chairman Tim Scott said as recently as Mar. 17 that negotiations were advancing, specifically crediting Senators Angela Alsobrooks, Thom Tillis, and White House adviser Patrick Witt on yield.
Tillis said lawmakers were “very close” to a deal on Mar. 18. The reported agreement in principle is the strongest signal yet that the central bottleneck may be loosening.
Nevertheless, the bill needs at least seven Senate Democrats, faces unresolved disputes over elected officials profiting from crypto ventures and tougher anti-money-laundering demands, must reconcile the Senate Banking and Senate Agriculture drafts, and must compete for floor time in a calendar that shrinks steadily toward midterms.
Better odds and clear odds are different things.
What Wall Street has already priced
The clearest evidence that CLARITY is a real Bitcoin variable came from Citi in March, when it cut its 12-month Bitcoin target to $112,000 from $143,000.
Citi said explicitly that stalled US legislation had narrowed the window for the regulatory catalysts it expected to drive ETF demand and broader institutional adoption. Its bull case is $165,000, and its recessionary bear case is $58,000.
The spread between those numbers is partly due to legislation.
JPMorgan's framing was directional rather than target-specific. In February, JPMorgan said crypto markets could get a meaningful lift in the second half of 2026 if market structure legislation is passed by midyear, because it would end regulation-by-enforcement, promote tokenization, and bring greater institutional participation within reach.
That is a bank telling clients to watch the Senate calendar as a second-half catalyst.
VanEck translated policy optimism into observable flow behavior in its January Bitcoin ChainCheck.
The firm said Bitcoin's buoyancy that month reflected, in part, CLARITY Act optimism, and that optimism coincided with a swing from $1.3 billion of ETP outflows in the prior 30-day period to $440 million of inflows.
Between Jan. 12 and 14 alone, Bitcoin ETP inflows totaled $1.66 billion. Policy sentiment moved money through registered products in measurable volume, with prices rising as a byproduct.
The Coinbase and EY-Parthenon survey of 351 institutional investors in March puts numbers on why.
Among firms planning to increase holdings this year, 65% cited improved regulatory clarity as a key driver. Separately, 66% said regulatory uncertainty was their primary concern, and 78% said market structure was the area most in need of clear guardrails.
For that cohort, regulation is a sizing decision. The share of firms allocating more than 5% of AUM to digital assets looks set to climb from 18% to 29% by year-end.
A Coinbase and EY-Parthenon survey of 351 institutions shows 78% want clearer market structure guardrails, with large crypto allocators projected to nearly double by year-end.Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent framed the same point for a mainstream audience when he told CNBC in February that CLARITY would give “great comfort to the market.”
Grayscale's 2026 outlook went further, calling a breakdown in bipartisan legislative progress a downside risk because regulatory clarity could bring public blockchains more deeply into mainstream financial infrastructure.
What investors should expect
The bull case does not require passage this week. It requires the market to start assigning higher odds to eventual passage, because Wall Street prices probability before it prices law.
If the stablecoin-yield compromise holds and Senate Banking moves again, the most immediate effect is a stronger bid for ETF demand expectations, driven by greater institutional comfort, greater platform willingness, and greater custodial confidence.
JPMorgan's second-half catalyst framing becomes relevant. Citi's cut looks too conservative. The Coinbase/EY survey data on planned 2026 allocation increases becomes a flow story rather than just a survey result.
The bear case requires only that the compromise frays. Ethics disputes, AML demands, or calendar congestion could stall momentum again, even if the yield clause holds.
In that scenario, crypto's legal footing rests on the SEC and CFTC's interpretive progress without the statutory lock-in that Atkins says only Congress can provide.
Citi's logic reasserts itself: the window for a regulatory catalyst narrows, and Bitcoin trades back on macro, rates, and positioning rather than on Washington.
The average crypto investor should not expect a Senate compromise to move Bitcoin vertically the next morning, since the mechanism is slower and more structural: less regulatory friction over time raises institutional comfort, which supports ETF inflows, market depth, and liquidity.
| Bull case: odds improve materially | The stablecoin-yield compromise holds, Senate Banking moves again, and markets start assigning higher odds to eventual CLARITY passage | Greater confidence in ETF demand, custody, broker/dealer participation, and platform willingness to scale crypto exposure | Supportive for Bitcoin over time, but not an instant vertical move |
| Base case: progress, but still messy | Negotiations improve, but the bill remains unresolved and passage is still uncertain | Institutions view the backdrop as better, but still wait for clearer legal durability before sizing up aggressively | Bitcoin gets some regulatory tailwind, but still trades heavily on macro, liquidity, and ETF flows |
| Bear case: compromise frays or stalls again | Ethics disputes, AML demands, committee differences, or calendar pressure freeze momentum again | No statutory lock-in; institutions stay cautious and rely on existing ETFs and current agency guidance rather than expanding exposure aggressively | Bitcoin goes back to trading more on rates, macro, and positioning than on Washington optimism |
| What the mechanism actually is | Legislative friction eases, even before final passage | More legal clarity can improve institutional comfort, custody confidence, and use of regulated market infrastructure | The effect is gradual: better ETF flows, deeper liquidity, and a wider market over time rather than a one-day spike |
BlackRock says Bitcoin's 2026 trajectory runs on liquidity conditions and institutional and wealth-advisory adoption, with any single headline a secondary input.
Recent ETF flow data make the same point. US spot Bitcoin ETFs took in $199.4 million on Mar. 17, then reversed to outflows of $163.5 million on Mar. 18 and $90.2 million on Mar. 19.
If CLARITY's odds keep improving, the effect for the average investor is a wider, deeper, more institutionally committed market for the asset already sitting in the account.




















































