As the CLARITY Act inches closer to becoming law after passing the House last July, its approach to decentralized finance remains frustratingly hollow. The bill, which cleared the House alongside the GENIUS Act, is currently stuck in Senate committee limbo, with two drafts needing reconciliation.
Both versions contain a glaring omission — DeFi regulations are literally left blank. This isn’t just sloppy drafting. It’s a ticking time bomb. The Senate Agriculture Committee’s draft actually brackets the DeFi sections, fundamentally saying “we’ll figure this out later.” Guess what? Later is now.
With January markup signaling the start of staff negotiations, vital definitions remain unresolved. What constitutes a “security” in the crypto world? Where does the DeFi perimeter begin and end? Nobody agrees.
The stakes couldn’t be higher for retail investors. If legislators can’t decide on the “decentralized” threshold for securities exemption, the entire protective framework could collapse. Too broad, and innovation flees offshore. Too narrow, and retail investors get fleeced. Again. Investors would benefit from implementing tiered stop-loss orders to protect themselves while this regulatory uncertainty continues.
Retail investors left dangling while Washington wavers on crypto. DeFi needs clear boundaries now, not promises for tomorrow.
At least some parts of the crypto ecosystem get clarity. Bitcoin and Ethereum would be designated digital commodities under CFTC jurisdiction. The SEC keeps watch over investment contracts. Digital commodities even get exemption from state blue sky laws. Must be nice to have certainty!
Meanwhile, the bill does outline some DeFi exemptions — network validators, computational work, and user interfaces for blockchains would all escape full regulatory burden. They’d still face anti-fraud and manipulation rules, though. No free lunch here. Achieving the necessary 60 votes in Senate will be challenging given the divided chamber’s differing views on retail protections.
The competing Responsible Financial Innovation Act from the Senate Banking Committee emphasizes stronger SEC authority and could provide alternative solutions to the jurisdictional conflicts plaguing crypto regulation.
The rulemaking timeline after passage stretches from 360 days to 18 months. That’s a long time for markets to operate in limbo. CFTC registration requirements for exchanges, brokers, and custodians look robust on paper, but mean nothing if DeFi remains undefined.
If congressional negotiators can’t fill in those bracketed blanks, retail investors will pay the price. The hybrid market status quo would continue — uncertainty for everyone, protection for no one.