Arthur Hayes says President Donald Trump should veto the Clarity Act if Congress sends it to the White House. He argues the bill would fold Bitcoin deeper into regulated finance, even though Bitcoin was built to operate outside it. Hayes says Bitcoin does not need state approval to hold value, and he ties that view directly to the Clarity Act debate.
Arthur Hayes draws a line between bank demand for crypto products and the policy goal behind new regulation. He says banks can offer Bitcoin because clients want the exposure.

He links that demand to portfolio needs during inflation and fiat expansion. He says clients often seek non-correlated assets that have performed well in those periods.
Hayes does not reject all regulation in crypto markets. However, he objects to building rules that make Bitcoin a standard financial system product.
He says the Clarity Act represents that wider project. In his reading, the bill would formalize Bitcoin’s place inside traditional institutional infrastructure.
Hayes says that the outcome conflicts with Bitcoin’s original purpose. He argues the asset was designed to function without regulatory approval or institutional dependence.
He makes that point directly when discussing Bitcoin’s value. Hayes says if Bitcoin needed regulatory legitimacy, “it would not be worth anything.”
He frames the debate around structure rather than access. Banks offering products is one issue, while redesigning regulation around Bitcoin is another.
Hayes uses the term “fugazi derivative” to describe a Bitcoin-linked product held within the financial system. He does not call it fraud.
Instead, he says the instrument copies Bitcoin exposure while adding institutional failure risk. That risk comes from the bank and custody chain behind it.
Bitcoin itself carries no counterparty risk in direct ownership. A bank-issued Bitcoin product adds exposure to the issuer’s solvency at the same time.
Hayes says that distinction matters more than price exposure alone. A client may track Bitcoin’s market value while also depending on a bank’s survival.
He says that setup recreates the same weaknesses Bitcoin was meant to avoid. If a bank fails, the client’s Bitcoin claim may fail with it.
Hayes states the point in blunt terms. “What you’ve actually built for the last 15 years is a zero,” he says.
He argues a custodial product could exist without Bitcoin’s decentralized network. In that case, the network’s 15 years of development would not justify the end product.
The latest point in Hayes’ argument is his call for a veto. He says Trump should block the Clarity Act if it reaches his desk.
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