Senate Republicans have reportedly reached near-complete agreement on stablecoin yield provisions in the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act (CLARITY Act) following a closed-door meeting on March 20.
The session included White House Crypto Council Executive Director Patrick Witt alongside Senators Cynthia Lummis, Thom Tillis, and Tim Scott, according to multiple reports from attendees and legislative staff.
What Happened Behind Closed Doors
Lummis’ press team described stablecoin yield negotiations as 99% resolved. The digital asset portions of the bill were said to be in a strong position. According to the update, the remaining friction is political rather than technical.
“We’re 99% of the way there on stablecoin yield, and negotiations on the digital asset portions of the bill are in a good place,” wrote Eleanor Terrett, citing Senator Lummis’s press team.
Lummis herself told reporters the meeting opened new directions she had not expected. However, she described the talks as being in a “delicate state,” with the focus shifting from finalizing text to stakeholder outreach.
Witt reportedly declined to comment after the session and appeared visibly frustrated.
Banks May Hold the Upper Hand
Crypto analyst Andy claimed the yield compromise appears to favor traditional banks. He suggested Coinbase and CEO Brian Armstrong may need to accept weaker stablecoin yield terms to move the legislation forward.
Christopher Perkins offered a more cautious view. He noted that regulatory capital relief proposals for banks surfaced just one day earlier, calling the timing deliberate.
He flagged two unresolved issues, last-minute vote trading and ethics legislation tied to the Stop Insider Trading Act, and called the outcome a coin flip.
What Could Still Go Wrong
The CLARITY Act passed the House 294-134 in July 2025 and cleared the Senate Agriculture Committee in January 2026. The Senate Banking Committee markup, now targeted for late April, remains the first of five steps before the bill can reach the president’s desk.
Senate Banking Republicans are also reportedly weighing whether to attach community bank deregulation provisions to the bill in exchange for House support on a separate housing package.
That addition could complicate an already tight legislative calendar heading into midterm season.
Senator Lummis posted a “YIELD” sign image with an eyes emoji on the same day, widely interpreted as a signal that progress was real.
However, signals are not signatures. The stablecoin yield war may be 99% over in substance. Whether Congress can close the final 1% before midterms remains an open question.