The crypto market is on the brink of a regulatory transformation as the US Senate Banking Committee gears up to vote on the CLARITY Act on Thursday, May 14. This markup session is pivotal, determining whether the most comprehensive digital asset framework in American history will progress or be sent back for further negotiations. The urgency of this legislation coincides with a notable surge in on-chain activity, making its provisions particularly critical at this juncture.
Recent analysis from XWIN Research Japan highlights a significant trend in stablecoin utilization, drawing from a CryptoQuant dataset. The All Stablecoins ERC-20 Active Addresses chart indicates a dramatic increase in stablecoin activity, with active addresses nearing 600,000 in 2026. This reflects not only a rise in stablecoin supply but also a genuine uptick in real on-chain dollar transactions, illustrating that stablecoins are being employed as a functional payment and settlement layer in ways previously unseen.
As this ecosystem expands, the CLARITY Act introduces a crucial regulatory distinction. The draft legislation clearly differentiates between payment stablecoins, which it aims to protect and legitimize, and yield-bearing stablecoin products, which may face stricter regulations. This marks a significant shift in how stablecoins are perceived within the financial framework.
The CLARITY draft builds upon the already-established GENIUS framework, which prohibits issuers from offering interest for merely holding stablecoins. It extends this prohibition to exchanges, custodians, brokers, and wallet providers, targeting the deposit-like APY model that has drawn millions of users to products promising attractive returns on stablecoin holdings.
The CLARITY Act: A Defining Moment for Stablecoins
The analysis from XWIN Research Japan clarifies that the CLARITY Act should not be interpreted as a sweeping regulatory attack on the stablecoin ecosystem. Rather, it aims to formalize stablecoins as a regulated payment infrastructure while delineating the boundaries between this infrastructure and the bank deposit model that yield-bearing products have been emulating.
Importantly, the legislation does not preclude rewards linked to genuine economic activities such as liquidity provision, staking, governance participation, and collateralized lending. The distinction lies between passive yield from holding stablecoins and yield derived from active engagement in financial activities. The former is the primary target of the legislation, while the latter may still have a viable pathway.
Another noteworthy aspect of the CLARITY Act is its focus on centralized intermediaries—namely, exchanges, custodians, brokers, and wallet providers that offer bank-like APY products. In contrast, genuinely decentralized protocols and self-custody efforts are not highlighted as significant regulatory concerns.
The implications of this analysis are promising, extending beyond stablecoins. Regulatory clarity surrounding payment infrastructure often accelerates the development of adjacent sectors, such as tokenized US Treasuries, real-world asset products, and on-chain financial systems. Given that stablecoins serve as the core dollar liquidity layer in crypto markets, an increase in regulated stablecoin usage could facilitate capital flow conditions that historically strengthen long-term investments in Bitcoin.
The outcome of Thursday’s vote will determine whether this framework becomes law or is sent back for further discussion. On-chain usage data suggests that the market is already moving towards the direction the legislation seeks to formalize.
In a related development, stablecoin dominance currently hovers around 12.1%, having steadily declined from its February peak of over 14%. This decline reflects a gradual rotation of capital back into higher-risk crypto assets following the market correction in the first quarter. The recent spike in stablecoin dominance indicated a defensive posture among investors, seeking refuge in dollar-pegged assets during periods of volatility.
However, since March, this trend has begun to reverse. Stablecoin dominance has dipped below the 50-day moving average and is now testing the 100-day moving average near the 12% mark, signaling that sidelined capital is gradually re-entering the market. Despite this decline, stablecoin dominance remains considerably higher than levels seen during peak speculative phases in previous bull cycles, indicating that a substantial amount of liquidity is still held in stablecoins rather than aggressively pursuing riskier assets.
This evolving landscape reflects the ongoing maturation of the crypto market as it navigates regulatory challenges and opportunities.
