The Digital Asset Market Clarity Act has now missed two deadlines the industry once treated as certainties, and its remaining runway for 2026 has shrunk to a single, hard number: August 7.
Where the Bill Actually Stands
H.R. 3633 passed the House in July 2025 by a wide 294-134 margin and cleared the Senate Banking Committee 15-9 in mid-May 2026, with two Democrats — Ruben Gallego and Angela Alsobrooks — joining all Republicans, though both attached conditions to their support. The bill has sat on the Senate Legislative Calendar since June 1, eligible for a floor vote at any time Majority Leader John Thune chooses to schedule one. He hasn't. The White House's informal July 4 signing target came and went without a cloture motion ever being filed.
The Senate returns from its break on July 13, and the chamber's own schedule makes Friday, August 7 the last working weekday before lawmakers scatter for the August recess — the deadline Stand With Crypto and other advocacy groups have been urging senators to treat as the real cutoff, since a miss there pushes the bill toward the 2026 midterm calendar and, most likely, into 2027.
What Changed in the Last 24 Hours
The most concrete development is fresh: sources told CoinDesk on July 9 that a new, merged version of the bill — reportedly combining the Senate Banking and Agriculture Committee texts with more than 70 pages of added language — could be released as soon as next week, with the goal of reaching the Senate floor around the week of July 20. That new draft still hasn't resolved the issue that has stalled talks for weeks: a Democrat-demanded ethics provision restricting senior officials, including the president, from maintaining business ties to the crypto industry. Ideas floated include letting state attorneys general sue over ethics violations, but negotiators say progress has slowed to a crawl.
Two other disputes remain live. Law enforcement groups, including the National District Attorneys' Association, argue that a self-custody provision (Section 604) would hamper criminal investigations — though the White House Crypto Council has secured at least one law enforcement endorsement in response. And banks continue to fight language they say would let crypto platforms offer interest-equivalent stablecoin yield outside the GENIUS Act's rules, a revenue stream Coinbase alone reportedly earns roughly $1.35 billion a year from.
Why the Odds Keep Falling
Prediction markets have tracked the stall in real time. Polymarket priced 2026 passage as high as 74% a month ago; it had fallen to 39% by July 1, a drop that accelerated after President Trump's financial disclosure revealed roughly $1.4 billion in crypto-related income for 2025, intensifying Democratic demands for the ethics language. Galaxy Digital has cut its own odds to around 50-60%, and Stifel's Brian Gardner has warned that missing the end-of-July window would cause the bill's prospects to "deteriorate materially."
What a Delay Would Actually Mean
A stalled CLARITY Act is not a return to lawlessness. The GENIUS Act, already signed into law, keeps stablecoin rules in force regardless, and exchanges continue operating under existing SEC and CFTC interpretive guidance. The real cost shows up more quietly: institutional allocators who are ready to commit capital but are waiting for statutory certainty before they do, keeping ETF flows choppier and crypto valuations more sensitive to Washington headlines than they would otherwise be.
The Bottom Line
The next two weeks matter more than any point since the May committee vote. If the merged draft resolves the ethics standoff cleanly enough to reach the floor by mid-to-late July, a signature before August recess is still realistic. If it doesn't, the bill likely joins the list of major legislation waiting on the other side of the midterms.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice.
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