Washington's Stablecoin Fix Is a Loophole Wrapped in a Patch
Banking trade groups say the Clarity Act's markup hearing this week hands industry exactly what it wants: regulatory cover without meaningful constraint. The bill's stablecoin loopholes reveal a familiar Washington pattern: deference to financial incumbents dressed as legislative progress.

The Senate Banking Committee's markup hearing on the Clarity Act, scheduled for Thursday, was supposed to be Washington finally getting serious about stablecoin regulation. Instead, what landed was a deal that hands the industry's biggest players exactly what they wanted: regulatory cover without regulatory constraint.
The legislation, which emerged after months of behind-the-scenes negotiation, grants stablecoin issuers a pathway to federal oversight — but only if they first secure state-level licensing. That structure sounds like federalism. In practice, it is a mechanism for industry to pick its regulator. State licensing regimes vary wildly; some are genuinely rigorous, others are barely more than a filing fee and a website disclaimer. An issuer headquartered in a permissive jurisdiction operates under a different regulatory gravity than one chartered in New York or Massachusetts. Banking trade groups, including the Bank Policy Institute and the Financial Services Roundtable, have criticized the arrangement, arguing it creates an uneven playing field that rewards regulatory arbitrage rather than discouraging it.
The Industry Read the Room Correctly
The stablecoin sector spent years operating in a vacuum. No federal framework existed; enforcement actions were reactive, case-by-case, and often too slow to prevent consumer harm. That vacuum was not an accident. It was the product of sustained lobbying and legislative triage — a sector that grew large enough to matter before anyone in Congress had the bandwidth to regulate it properly. The Clarity Act represents a first attempt to close that gap, and the banking industry's complaint — that the bill's loopholes favor non-bank issuers — is a legitimate objection dressed in the language of consumer protection.
The trade groups have a point. If the legislation allows stablecoin operators to sidestep the reserve requirements and transparency obligations that apply to deposit-taking institutions, it creates a category of financial intermediary that enjoys the privileges of the banking system — stable value, wide distribution, integration with payment rails — without bearing its costs. That is not a technical flaw. It is a structural choice, and it was made by the industry's most well-resourced actors, in rooms where consumer advocates were not seated.
The Pattern Is Familiar
Washington's relationship with financial innovation has a consistent rhythm. A new product emerges; it scales past the point where regulators can easily intervene; incumbents embed it into existing infrastructure; Congress responds with legislation that formalizes the status quo rather than restructuring it. The Clarity Act fits this template. By providing a pathway to federal charter that routes through permissive state regimes, it converts a regulatory gap into a competitive advantage for operators who moved fastest and sourced the most favorable jurisdiction. Banks, which operate under tighter constraints, are right to call this unfair. They are less right to pretend they would have done anything differently in the industry's position.
The bill's defenders argue it is a first step — that perfection should not be the enemy of the workable, and that a flawed framework is better than none. That argument has merit, but only if the legislation includes genuine enforcement mechanisms and a clear timeline for closing the state-licensing loophole. The sources do not confirm those provisions are in the markup text, and the banking trade groups' criticism suggests the industry itself has identified the ambiguity.
What Congress Is Actually Deciding
Thursday's markup will be heavily amended before it reaches the floor, and the real negotiation will happen in conference, not in committee. But the directional choice matters: whether stablecoins become a regulated utility with clear reserve obligations and consumer protections, or whether they become a new category of financial intermediary that is loosely supervised but structurally protected from the kind of enforcement that would impose genuine costs on bad actors.
The stakes are concrete. If stablecoins remain only partially constrained and a major issuer suffers a run or a reserve shortfall, the fallout lands on retail holders and on the broader payment system. Issuers capture the margin during the good years; the public absorbs the risk during the bad ones. That is the logic the Clarity Act's loopholes preserve. Whether Congress has the appetite to close them before the next crisis is the question Thursday's hearing should be asking — and, based on the trade groups' criticism, is not.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/CryptoBriefing/18442
- https://t.me/CryptoBriefing/18439