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Crypto week on Capitol Hill: Regulatory breakout or political bull trap

The mood in Washington has turned risk-on—at least for digital assets—as lawmakers load the legislative order book with three pro-crypto bills under the banner of “Crypto Week.” Like a breakout trade that’s waited months for a clean catalyst, the industry is hoping this is the moment crypto sheds its legal ambiguity and steps onto firmer regulatory ground. But even the cleanest chart can turn into a bull trap if momentum stalls.

The centrepiece is the CLARITY Act, a jurisdictional tug-of-war that aims to pull crypto oversight away from the SEC and hand it to the CFTC. For industry insiders, this is like switching refs mid-game—one more lenient, less prone to whistle every fast break. It tries to sunset the Howey Test, the Depression-era yardstick that regulators have been using to shoehorn modern blockchain protocols into century-old definitions. Proponents say the new framework gives mature blockchains room to breathe. Detractors call it a regulatory Trojan horse packed with tokens that would otherwise fail compliance.

Then there's the GENIUS Act, a more buttoned-up attempt to domesticate stablecoins. It mandates one-to-one backing with liquid reserves, sets clear issuer standards, and folds stablecoin players into the Bank Secrecy Act. The idea is to merge the credibility of fiat with the flexibility of blockchain—no algorithmic alchemy, just clean collateral and clean audit trails. But even this bill, which passed the Senate with bipartisan support, isn’t without macro implications. If too much capital flows into stablecoin reserves, it could crowd out Treasury demand or create bottlenecks in repo markets—an invisible hand squeeze hiding beneath the promise of monetary innovation.

Meanwhile, the Anti-CBDC Surveillance State Act adds a shot of culture war volatility to the mix. Pitched as a bulwark against central bank overreach, it seeks to outlaw any digital dollar issued or intermediated by the Fed. It’s not just about privacy—it’s about keeping programmable money out of Washington’s direct control. Supporters see it as pre-emptive freedom insurance; critics view it as a shortsighted block on future monetary tools. Either way, it’s a wedge issue that cuts through partisan lines differently than the other two bills.

Markets aren’t waiting for the ink to dry. Coinbase’s lobbying arm has gone into full breakout mode, with CEOs and lobby groups pressing Capitol Hill like activist shareholders. Yet prediction markets tell a more nuanced story. The GENIUS Act trades like a done deal, while the CLARITY Act remains a coin toss. The anti-CBDC measure hasn’t even made it through pre-clearance.

Still, the broader signal here is loud: crypto is back in Washington’s crosshairs—not as a threat, but as a potential asset class worthy of institutional-grade rules. Whether that translates into legislation or just another head-fake depends on whether lawmakers can clear the procedural resistance in time. Because like any trade, timing is everything—and in D.C., even momentum trades can get filibustered.

Author

Stephen Innes

Stephen Innes

SPI Asset Management

With more than 25 years of experience, Stephen has a deep-seated knowledge of G10 and Asian currency markets as well as precious metal and oil markets.

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