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Why Ripple Backs the CLARITY Act While Coinbase Walked Away

20h ago
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The US crypto market structure bill, known as the CLARITY Act, has exposed a growing split inside the crypto industry. While Coinbase withdrew support after recent Senate amendments, Ripple has publicly backed the bill and urged lawmakers to move forward.

The divergence highlights how the same regulatory framework can produce very different winners and losers, depending on a company’s business model and strategic direction.

What the CLARITY Act Is Trying to Do

The CLARITY Act aims to settle a long-running dispute in US crypto regulation: who should oversee crypto markets. 

At its core, the bill tries to draw clearer lines between the SEC and CFTC. 

That decision affects how tokens trade, how exchanges operate, how stablecoins are structured, and how DeFi fits into US law.

Why the Senate Amendments Changed the Politics

The House passed an earlier version of the bill that many crypto firms supported. But the Senate Banking Committee introduced a full rewrite, not minor tweaks.

The Senate draft expands SEC influence, adds disclosure requirements for tokens, restricts stablecoin rewards, and brings parts of DeFi closer to bank-style compliance and surveillance. 

Those changes reshaped the incentives for major crypto companies.

Why Coinbase Opposed the Senate Version

Coinbase argues the Senate amendments cross several red lines. The company says the draft weakens the CFTC’s role, expands SEC discretion, and creates uncertainty for token listings.

More importantly, Coinbase objects to provisions that restrict stablecoin rewards. Stablecoin yield is a key part of Coinbase’s consumer-facing model and a competitive tool against traditional banks.

Coinbase also warned that language around tokenized equities and DeFi could limit innovation and increase regulatory risk for platforms operating at scale.

Why Ripple Supports the Bill Anyway

Ripple’s position is shaped by a very different business model. Over the past year, Ripple has shifted heavily toward institutional infrastructure, regulated payment rails, and compliance-first expansion.

For Ripple, regulatory clarity—even if strict—is often better than uncertainty. A clear framework makes it easier for banks, payment firms, and institutions to engage with XRP, RippleNet, and Ripple’s stablecoin, RLUSD.

Stablecoin Rules Benefit Ripple More Than Coinbase

The Senate draft treats stablecoins primarily as payment instruments, not yield-generating products. That approach aligns closely with Ripple’s strategy for RLUSD, which focuses on settlement and payments rather than consumer yield.

For Coinbase, the same rules reduce differentiation and shift the advantage back toward banks. For Ripple, they normalize stablecoins as regulated infrastructure and raise barriers for competitors built around retail incentives.

DeFi and Compliance Create a Regulatory Moat

The Senate amendments also expand compliance expectations around DeFi and on-chain activity. That creates higher costs and legal complexity for firms closely tied to open DeFi access and retail trading.

Ripple’s exposure to DeFi is limited. Its focus on enterprise partnerships means tighter rules can actually reduce competition and favor firms that already operate within regulatory frameworks.

The SEC vs. CFTC Question Matters Less to Ripple

Coinbase has consistently pushed for a CFTC-led model, which would lower securities-law risk for exchanges and token listings. Ripple, after settling years of SEC litigation, prioritizes predictability over regulator identity.

As long as the rules are clear and stable, Ripple can operate within an SEC-influenced framework. Coinbase, which lists and supports a broad range of tokens, faces much higher downside from expanded SEC authority.

The CLARITY Act debate is no longer just crypto versus regulators. It is increasingly crypto versus crypto, with firms backing the version of regulation that best fits their economic interests.

Whether the bill passes or stalls, the split reveals a deeper shift in the industry—and signals that “regulatory clarity” does not mean the same thing to everyone.

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