Coinbase pulls support for crypto bill: ‘no bill’ better than ‘bad bill’

Major US crypto exchange Coinbase says it has wit

Coinbase pulls support for crypto bill: 'no bill' better than 'bad bill'

Coinbase pulls support for crypto bill: 'no bill' better than 'bad bill'

Major US crypto exchange Coinbase says it has withdrawn its support for the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, with CEO Brian Armstrong arguing that it would cause far more harm than good to the crypto industry in its current form.

“This version would be materially worse than the current status quo. We’d rather have no bill than a bad bill. Hopefully we can all get to a better draft,” Armstrong said in an X post on Wednesday.

“After reviewing the Senate Banking draft text over the last 48hrs, Coinbase unfortunately can’t support the bill as written,” Armstrong said.

Coinbase CEO raises several concerns in draft bill

Armstrong flagged several concerns, including what he described as a “defacto ban” on tokenized equities and sweeping restrictions on decentralized finance, arguing the proposal would grant the government “unlimited access” to financial records and raise serious privacy risks for consumers.

He also argued that the draft takes power away from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, slows innovation, and hands more authority to the US Securities and Exchange Commission, which is a major concern for the crypto industry given the SEC’s “regulation by enforcement” approach under the Biden administration.

Coinbase, Cryptocurrencies, Banking, Adoption, Brian Armstrong, United States
Source: Ryan Adams

Armstrong also echoed a fear shared by many in the industry that the current draft could “kill rewards” on stablecoins and is designed to shield banks from competition. 

Banking lobbyists have warned that offering users roughly 5% risk-free yields on stablecoins could trigger a “deposit flight,” with billions pulled from low-interest bank accounts.

Industry participants are divided on the outcome

ETF analyst James Seyffart commented on Armstrong’s post, saying this is “not what we wanna see/hear with regard to CLARITY.” “This industry needs a market structure bill,” Seyffart said.

However, Armstrong is hopeful lawmakers will ultimately reach the “right outcome,” a sentiment shared by other executives across the industry.