
On May 9, the three largest US banking trade groups, the Independent Community Bankers of America, the Bank Policy Institute, and the American Bankers Association, formally rejected the Tillis-Alsobrooks stablecoin compromise embedded in the CLARITY Act. They did it four days before Senate Banking Chair Tim Scott (R-SC) is set to gavel in the markup at 10:30 AM ET on May 14 in the Dirksen Senate Office Building. The compromise was supposed to be the breakthrough that finally moved the bill out of committee. The banking lobby just told the Senate that even the watered-down version is unacceptable.
This is the most consequential stretch in the 10-month legislative push since the House passed the bill 294-134 in July 2025. Here is what the banks actually said, why they said it now, and what happens to the May 14 markup if Tim Scott calls their bluff.
What the Tillis-Alsobrooks Compromise Actually Does
The deal that the banks just rejected is not the maximalist version of stablecoin yield. It is the negotiated middle ground that Senators Thom Tillis (R-NC) and Angela Alsobrooks (D-MD) spent four months brokering between the crypto industry, the banking sector, and Senate Banking moderates. The compromise prohibits passive yield on stablecoin balances, the kind of automatic interest a money-market fund pays, while permitting limited "activity-based rewards" tied to specific user actions like making payments, completing transfers, or participating in platform programs.
The legal distinction matters because it determines if stablecoin issuers can compete with bank deposits at all. Under the compromise, Circle could not pay you 4% just for parking USDC in your wallet. But it could pay you a small reward for using USDC to settle a payment, refer a merchant, or participate in an issuer-run loyalty program. Phemex covered the mechanics of this distinction in its earlier breakdown of what the Tillis-Alsobrooks deal means for stablecoin holders, and the framework was widely seen as the floor of what the crypto industry would accept.
The banking sector signaled tentative agreement in late March. By April, the deal looked locked. The May 9 rejection caught the Senate Banking Committee staff off guard because it arrived after months of behind-the-scenes alignment.
Why the Banks Pulled the Pin Now
The trade groups did not reject the compromise on legal grounds. They rejected it on competitive grounds. Their position is straightforward, and it is honest about the funding-base economics that drive bank profitability.
US banks fund roughly 80% of their lending operations through customer deposits. The interest spread between what they pay depositors (currently 0.4% on average for checking, 4.0-4.5% on high-yield savings) and what they charge borrowers (7.5% on 30-year mortgages, 8-12% on commercial loans) is the single largest profit center in the industry. Anything that pulls deposit balances out of bank checking accounts and into stablecoin wallets compresses that spread.
Activity-based rewards do exactly that, even in the compromised form. A retail user who completes a few transactions per month and earns a small reward in the process has been given a reason to keep balance in USDC instead of in a Bank of America checking account. Multiplied across the 50 million Americans who already hold a stablecoin, the deposit migration math becomes meaningful at the system level.
The trade groups' May 9 letter, reported first by CryptoSlate, framed the objection in stability language rather than competition language. Their argument is that letting stablecoin issuers offer reward-like incentives, in any form, "creates an uneven playing field" and risks "disintermediating the regulated banking system." Translation: this would cost us money, so we are calling it a financial-stability problem.
The May 14 Markup Is Still On
Senator Tim Scott has not flinched. The May 14 markup remains scheduled for 10:30 AM ET. The notice posted by the Senate Banking Committee on May 8, covered by CoinDesk, made the time and location official. As of May 9, no procedural motion has been filed to delay or recess the meeting.
That is the most important piece of information in this story. The banking lobby's preferred outcome is a postponement to give the trade groups time to extract a better deal. A postponement is not happening. Scott has publicly framed market-structure legislation as a 2026 deliverable for the Republican majority, and any delay past mid-May pushes the bill into the summer recess and creates real risk that the Senate runs out of floor time before the November election cycle takes over.
The thursday committee hearing that preceded the markup, also reported by CoinDesk, was the public-facing testimony round. The May 14 session is the procedural one where amendments get filed, debated, and either adopted or rejected. This is where the bill text either firms up or fractures.
What Happens at a Senate Banking Markup
Most readers have never sat through one of these, so the procedural sequence is worth walking through in plain English.
At a Senate Banking markup, each committee member can file amendments to the underlying bill text. The chair (Scott) controls the order in which amendments are called, but every member is entitled to be heard. The committee then votes on each amendment individually before voting on the bill as amended. A majority of the 23-member committee is required to advance the bill out of committee to the full Senate floor.
Three different things can go wrong inside the committee room on May 14, and each one has a different probability and a different consequence.
Amendments unwind the compromise. A senator allied with the banking lobby could introduce an amendment that strips the activity-based-rewards language, adds a stricter passive-yield ban, or imposes an outright prohibition on issuer-paid incentives. If that amendment passes, the crypto industry walks back from supporting the bill, the House conference falls apart, and the entire effort collapses.
The vote count slips below the majority threshold. The compromise was assembled with a working majority in mind. If two or three Republican members defect to the banking position and Democrats hold their line against any pro-crypto language, the bill fails to clear committee, and that single procedural failure ends the legislative track for 2026.
The chair pulls the bill. If Scott's whip count shows the vote will fail, he can pull the bill before it goes to a vote. That preserves the bill's procedural status but signals weakness and invites months of additional negotiation.
The Reconciliation Path After May 14
If the bill clears committee, the path to the President's desk involves three more steps. The full Senate has to vote, with 60 votes required to overcome a filibuster, which means at least seven Democrats have to support the bill. The Senate version has to go to conference with the House version (the House passed H.R. 3633 by 294-134 in July 2025), where conferees from both chambers reconcile the differences. The reconciled text then goes back to both chambers for a final vote before reaching the President.
Here is the honest read on the timeline. Even with a successful May 14 markup, the realistic window for a Senate floor vote is late May through June. Conference negotiation takes another four to six weeks. A signed bill before the August recess is possible but tight. A signed bill before the November election is more likely.
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Stage
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Status
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Earliest Completion
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Senate Banking markup
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Scheduled May 14
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May 14, 2026
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Full Senate vote (60 needed)
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Pending markup outcome
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Late May to June 2026
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House-Senate conference
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Pending Senate passage
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June to July 2026
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Final passage and signing
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Pending conference
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July to September 2026
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The compromise rejection does not derail the legislative track. It just guarantees the May 14 markup will be louder, longer, and more contested than the staff had planned for.
What This Means for Crypto Markets
The market reaction to the May 9 news has been muted. Bitcoin held above $98,000 through the day, and stablecoin issuers like Circle showed no immediate price stress in their secondary trading. That muted response is a tell. The market is treating the bank rejection as a negotiating tactic rather than a kill shot.
But the medium-term implication for stablecoin economics is real. If the activity-based-rewards language survives the May 14 markup, US users get the first legally clear path to earn something on their stablecoin holdings since the GENIUS Act passed in March. If it gets stripped, the existing patchwork stays in place, where stablecoin yield exists only on third-party platforms and is technically separate from the issuer's product. Phemex covered the layered platform implications in its analysis of bank lobbying pressure on stablecoin yield, and that framework still applies.
The CLARITY Act itself does more than handle stablecoins. It codifies the SEC-CFTC commodity classification from the March 17 ruling into federal statute, removes legal ambiguity around staking and protocol mining, and provides a permanent framework that a future SEC chair cannot reverse through interpretive guidance alone. Those provisions are uncontroversial and likely to survive any version of the markup. The yield language is the contested piece.
What to Watch on May 14
Three signals will tell you within the first hour if the markup is going clean or going sideways.
The opening statements are first. If Tim Scott's opening explicitly defends the activity-based-rewards language and ranking member Elizabeth Warren attacks it on consumer-protection grounds, the partisan lines are normal and the bill probably advances. If Republican members start hedging on the yield framework in their opening statements, the compromise is in trouble.
The amendments filed in the first 30 minutes are the second signal. A clean markup involves a handful of technical amendments and one or two substantive ones from each side. A messy markup involves a flurry of strip amendments designed to gut the yield language. The amendment count is the leading indicator.
The third signal is the vote count on the first contested amendment. If the committee votes on a banking-aligned strip amendment and it loses by 12-11 or 13-10, the bill is on track. If it loses by 14-9 or wins, the negotiated framework is unraveling. The order of amendments matters less than the margin on the first one that draws a real debate.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the CLARITY Act in plain English?
The CLARITY Act is the federal bill that defines which crypto assets are commodities (regulated by the CFTC) and which are securities (regulated by the SEC). It also handles stablecoin issuance rules, staking, and protocol mining. The House passed it 294-134 in July 2025, and the Senate Banking Committee markup is scheduled for May 14, 2026.
Why did the banks reject the Tillis-Alsobrooks compromise?
US banks fund roughly 80% of their lending through customer deposits, and stablecoin issuers paying activity-based rewards give users a reason to keep balances in USDC instead of in bank checking accounts. The trade groups dressed the objection up in financial-stability language, but the underlying reason is competitive. Every dollar that migrates from a checking account to a stablecoin wallet is a dollar of cheap funding the banks lose.
What happens if the May 14 markup fails?
Tim Scott can pull the bill before a vote, reopen negotiations, and try again later. The bill itself is not killed by a failed markup, but the legislative window narrows considerably. A bill that does not clear committee by July faces real risk of running out the 2026 calendar.
Will the CLARITY Act actually pass this year?
Polymarket has been pricing 60-70% odds of CLARITY Act passage in 2026 for most of the spring. Those odds will recalibrate in real time on May 14 based on the markup outcome. The realistic window for a signed bill is July through October, assuming the markup clears and the full Senate vote follows in June.
Bottom Line
The May 14 Senate Banking markup is the next real binary event in US crypto regulation, and the May 9 bank rejection just made it the loudest one of the year. Tim Scott has held the date, the bill text has not been formally amended, and the compromise still has a working majority on paper. The actual question on May 14 is if Republican members hold their position when the banking lobby is whispering in their ear and the trade-group letter is sitting on every desk in the Dirksen Building.
Watch the first contested amendment vote. If the strip amendment loses by a close margin, the compromise survives and the bill moves to the floor. If it wins or loses by more than four votes, the framework needs to be rebuilt and the timeline slides into the summer. Either way, May 14 is the day the next phase of US crypto law gets written.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency trading involves substantial risk. Always conduct your own research before making trading decisions.






