Franklin Templeton’s Chris Perkins argues that the $2.7 trillion crypto market doesn’t need the Clarity Act to survive. Despite months of Senate deadlock on the landmark market structure legislation, the industry has already proven it can grow, attract capital, and build institutional rails without a federal regulatory framework in place.
The Clarity Act cleared the House last July, in a 294–134 bipartisan vote, drawing unanimous Republican support and 78 Democrats. Since then, the Senate has stalled on three stubborn issues: stablecoin yield language, DeFi provisions, and securing the full Republican committee bloc needed to advance.
Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott identified those pressure points on April 14, 2026, calling each resolvable within two weeks, a deadline that has already slipped.
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Where the Clarity Act Actually Stands
The path from Senate Banking Committee to presidential signature involves five discrete steps: committee markup and vote, a 60-vote Senate floor threshold, reconciliation with the Agriculture Committee’s Digital Commodity Intermediaries Act, House-Senate conference, and then signature.
Each step is a potential kill zone. Senator Thom Tillis requested additional review time on stablecoin regulation and yield structures in late April, pushing the Banking Committee markup from April into May, the third timeline revision in as many months. Although it looks like it has already been resolved.
Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse has now shifted his passage prediction twice: 80% odds by the end of April on February 19, revised to the end of May on April 13, citing what he called “peak frustration” as a signal that compromise was near.
Polymarket pricing puts 2026 enactment at 50-50 or lower. TD Cowen analyst Jaret Seiberg has noted that passage may ultimately require a deal that dissatisfies both the crypto lobby and the banking sector equally, which is a rough definition of a workable compromise.
Senator Cynthia Lummis put it plainly at Bitcoin Conference 2026:
“We are gonna markup the CLARITY Act in May… We are gonna get it to the finish line.”
She also issued the clearest warning about failure: a stall in 2026 likely means no market structure legislation until 2030 or later. Procedural delay?
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Is Crypto Actually ‘Fine’?
The executive argument isn’t baseless. Institutional adoption has accelerated without a federal framework: BlackRock’s IBIT and Fidelity’s FBTC have collectively pulled billions in net ETF inflows, with spot Bitcoin CVD data confirming aggressive institutional buying even through regulatory uncertainty.
Stablecoins, USDT and USDC combined, now underpin over $100 billion in daily trading volume globally, and the stablecoin market cap has crossed $320 billion without the Clarity Act’s stablecoin regulation provisions ever becoming law.

The ‘fine’ argument is essentially this: US crypto policy ambiguity has not killed the market. Grayscale’s court win against the SEC, the ETF approvals, and offshore liquidity have collectively done what legislation hasn’t. The industry has adapted.
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The post Clarity Act Update: Industry Leader Says Crypto Market Is ‘Fine’ Despite Deadlock appeared first on Cryptonews.
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According to Franklin Templeton's head of Digital Assets Chris Perkins, the crypto industry will be "just fine" if
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BIG BREAKTHROUGH FOR CRYPTO: Senator Thom Tillis is pushing for the Clarity Act to move to markup by mid-May. Major disputes over stablecoin yields are reportedly resolved as the Senate Banking Committee prepares to advance new regulatory frameworks. 