The Senate’s push to finalize crypto market structure legislation before the holidays is hitting major snags. Three unresolved disputes are threatening to delay the bill into 2025.
Jake Chervinsky, who tracks crypto policy developments, outlined the obstacles in a recent thread. The stakes are high as the industry seeks long-term protection from regulatory uncertainty.
The GENIUS Act introduced a prohibition on stablecoin issuers paying interest or yield directly to holders.
Banks negotiated this restriction earlier in the legislative process. However, the narrow wording of the ban has created tension between traditional finance and crypto stakeholders.
The text does not address non-yield rewards or yield paid by third-party services.
Banks view this as a loophole that undermines their competitive position. They are now pushing to expand the prohibition within the market structure bill. This amendment attempt has raised concerns about mission creep in legislation meant to focus on market structure rather than stablecoin specifics.
The banking sector’s influence in Congress could sway enough senators to either kill the bill or force significant changes. Traditional financial institutions argue that any form of yield on stablecoins threatens their deposit base.
Crypto advocates counter that third-party services should remain outside the scope of issuer restrictions.
The House passed its version, the CLARITY Act, in July without these complications.
Senate Banking and Agriculture committees are now working separately on securities and commodities law components. Neither committee wants to schedule a markup hearing until both drafts can secure passing votes.
Conflicts of interest provisions represent the second major hurdle.
Some Democrats are conditioning their votes on language restricting presidential family involvement in crypto business dealings. The political motivation is transparent, but finding compromise language has proven difficult.
The DeFi regulatory approach has emerged as the most consequential dispute.
Market structure legislation was designed to address centralized platforms that control user funds and transactions. Traditional finance firms want the bill to treat developers and validators as intermediaries subject to registration requirements.
Chervinsky emphasized that developer protections are non-negotiable for the crypto industry. He referenced past regulatory actions against Tornado Cash and decentralized exchange developers.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control sanctioned the protocol while the Department of Justice pursued criminal charges against its creators.
The Securities and Exchange Commission has also pressured decentralized exchange developers to centralize their protocols before registration. These enforcement actions have created legal uncertainty that market structure legislation aims to resolve.
Without clear protections, developers face potential criminal liability for writing open-source code.
Traditional finance incumbents like Citadel have lobbied Congress to maintain regulatory barriers against DeFi competition. This protection of existing market structures conflicts directly with crypto innovation principles. The industry consensus is that no bill is better than one that exposes developers to intermediary regulations.
The compressed timeline before Congress breaks for holidays makes December passage unlikely. Resolving these three disputes requires careful negotiation and broad industry consensus.
January could see renewed efforts as stakeholders work toward language that balances innovation with regulatory clarity.
The post Senate Crypto Market Structure Bill Faces December Deadlock Over DeFi and Stablecoins appeared first on Blockonomi.


