stablecoin bill faces delays

While crypto enthusiasts awaited a breakthrough in regulatory clarity, the Senate Banking Committee abruptly postponed its vote on critical crypto market structure legislation on January 15, 2026.

The vote, originally planned for Thursday following Wednesday’s policy debate, hit a wall. Industry opposition and disagreements among committee members derailed what many hoped would be a defining moment.

Chairman Tim Scott tried putting a brave face on the delay. He’s “optimistic” about eventual passage. Sure, buddy. We’ve heard that before.

Despite all the political tap dancing, we’ve seen this regulatory runaround before. Progress delayed is progress denied.

The setback comes as Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong publicly withdrew support for the CLARITY Act. His beef? The bill might ban tokenized equities, restrict DeFi innovation, and expand government access to financial data. Not exactly what the crypto faithful signed up for.

Meanwhile, the GENIUS Act (fancy acronym alert: Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for US Stablecoins) sits in committee limbo. Introduced nearly a year ago by a bipartisan group including Senators Hagerty, Scott, Gillibrand, and Lummis, it aims to regulate payment stablecoins through federal and state frameworks. The legislation would require stablecoin issuers to maintain 1:1 reserves backed by approved assets to ensure stability and user protection.

The stablecoin rules are no joke. Issuers hitting $10 billion in market cap must shift to Comptroller regulation within 360 days or stop issuing new coins. Smaller state-regulated issuers can keep operating until they reach that threshold.

Senator Blumenthal didn’t mince words, calling crypto a “gamble” the financial system typically avoids. Chairman Scott countered with talk about “access for average families at lower costs.” Classic political tennis match.

Market confidence is wavering. The legislation could reshape tokenized assets and DeFi completely, while the stablecoin framework targets payment innovations with heavy oversight.

The White House has pledged commitment to collaboration with both the Senate committee and industry leaders to facilitate passage of bipartisan legislation that addresses market concerns.

Both sides agree on one thing – federal rules are needed. But getting there? That’s the trillion-dollar question hanging over the crypto universe.

For now, the industry holds its breath. Another delay, another day of uncertainty in crypto land. Some breakthrough.

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