Senate Sets Jan. 15 Vote for ‘CLARITY Act’; XRP Jumps 12%

Two Senate committees race to define crypto’s rules of the road, triggering a double-digit rally for assets caught in the regulatory crosshairs.

The U.S. Senate scheduled a high-stakes markup for the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act (CLARITY Act) on January 15, accelerating a legislative push to end the jurisdictional war between the SEC and CFTC. Markets reacted instantly. XRP surged 12% to $2.37, outpacing Bitcoin ($93,716) and Ethereum ($3,239), as traders bet the bill would finally classify legacy assets as commodities.

Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott confirmed the date in a legislative notice circulated Friday. The move establishes a synchronized “dueling markup” with the Senate Agriculture Committee, effectively forcing a showdown on market structure before the impending government funding deadline.

The “70-80%” Argument

Proponents aim to resolve the “regulation by enforcement” era that has plagued the industry since 2022. The bill’s core mechanism splits digital assets into three buckets: digital commodities (CFTC), securities (SEC), and payment stablecoins. Supporters claim this clarity is not just administrative. It is a volatility killer.

“Clearer rules could cut market manipulation by 70% to 80%,” noted a legislative briefing cited by supporters, arguing that federal oversight would force wash-trading out of offshore venues.

The Political Math (53-47)

Passage remains a statistical gauntlet. Republicans hold a razor-thin 53-47 majority, but the CLARITY Act requires 60 votes to overcome a filibuster. Senate leads must flip at least seven Democrats. The friction point? DeFi surveillance.

Alex Thorn, Head of Research at Galaxy, warned that Democratic negotiators have introduced “robust demands” for front-end sanctions compliance on decentralized protocols. If retained, these provisions could effectively ban unauthorized DeFi interfaces in the U.S., a poison pill for privacy advocates.

Institutional Capital Waiting

Wall Street is watching the text, not just the vote count. A January 9 report from Goldman Sachs described the legislation as a “pivotal catalyst” for unlocking pension funds currently sidelined by compliance risks. The market agrees. While Bitcoin added a modest 1% on the news, assets historically targeted by the SEC, like Solana ($139, +4%), saw outsized volume.

The committees convene at 10:00 AM ET on Jan. 15.

> ABOUT_THE_AUTHOR _

James Chatfield

// Senior News Editor

I lead the editorial team covering digital assets and blockchain regulation at CryptoWatchDaily. After earning a Journalism degree from The University of Sheffield, I spent a decade reporting on traditional finance before shifting focus to crypto. I value accuracy and clarity over hype. When I’m not tracking market movements, I enjoy distance running and collecting vintage sci-fi novels.

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