The proposed Digital Asset Market Clarity Act seeks to resolve long-standing jurisdictional friction by sorting tokens into three distinct categories: digital commodities, investment contract assets, and payment stablecoins. This structure dictates oversight—placing commodities under the CFTC and securities-like investments under the SEC—while providing a unique 'maturity' mechanism. Projects that begin as centralized fundraising efforts can eventually transition to commodity status once they achieve sufficient decentralization and network utility.
Beyond shifting agency authority, the bill introduces critical consumer safeguards, including mandatory segregation of customer funds and strict disclosure requirements regarding conflicts of interest. These measures are designed to prevent the systemic failures observed in past industry collapses, such as the bankruptcy of FTX. While the bill passed the House in July 2025 with a 294–134 vote and cleared the Senate Banking Committee in May 2026, it faces final hurdles. Lawmakers remain locked in negotiations over ethics provisions, stablecoin yield rules, and the oversight of decentralized finance (DeFi) protocols. If enacted, the legislation would replace a decade of litigation-driven uncertainty with a standardized environment, fundamentally altering how ordinary users interact with digital assets in the United States.

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