Galaxy Digital has revised downward its assessment of the likelihood that the U.S. Senate will pass the CLARITY Act this year, signaling a shrinking window for regulatory action ahead of the August recess. In a Friday note, Galaxy’s head of research, Alex Thorn, said the probability of enactment in 2026 was trimmed to 60% from 75% previously, reflecting stalled negotiations and the looming legislative pause. thorn noted that the calendar matters: the Senate must act before a late-July recess, after which the window for major year-end legislation effectively closes.
Thorn emphasized that substantial legislation typically slows as midterm elections approach, and a 60-vote bill that still requires floor debate, amendments, and reconciliation with the Senate Agriculture text faces a tight timetable. “Anything later and the procedural steps do not fit before the recess,” he said. The CLARITY Act has gained traction in the House and in Senate committees, but passage now hinges on floor time and cross-chamber alignment.
Source: Alex Thorn
Separately, analysts have begun to bracket their expectations differently. JPMorgan researchers said they see less than a 50% chance the CLARITY Act passes this year, citing the tightening congressional calendar. In contrast, Bitwise Investment Chief Matt Hougan pegged the odds as contingent on ongoing negotiations and suggested a broad range of 5% to 30%, depending on information from insiders. Hougan’s comments were reported in Cointelegraph.
Senator Cynthia Lummis, who chairs the Senate Banking Subcommittee on Digital Assets, has stepped up her push for passage, publishing numerous posts on X in June to press lawmakers toward a floor vote. “The Clarity Act passed committee. The floor is next. We did not come this far to quit at the 5 yard line,” she wrote on X. Source
Reflecting on the policy dynamics, Lummis also told CNBC that the working group on the bill is addressing ethics and illicit finance provisions that could affect floor support. The ongoing negotiations remain a central risk to near-term passage. CNBC interview excerpt noted the complexity of achieving a converged, floor-ready text. For deeper context on how the CLARITY Act intersects with non-custodial DeFi and broader regulatory goals, see Cointelegraph Magazine’s coverage.
The CLARITY Act has progressed through Senate Agriculture and Banking committees and now awaits a floor vote. To move without extended debate, it must secure at least 60 votes and undergo possible amendments, followed by reconciliation with the House-passed version and any changes that emerge from conferencing. Galaxy’s Thorn underscored that Majority Leader John Thune would need to schedule floor time in July to keep the bill on track, given that the late-July start of the recess would complicate efforts to complete all steps beforehand.
Analysts note that, even with committee approvals, Senate leadership must allocate a window for floor consideration and potential amendments. Any delay beyond July could render passage impractical before lawmakers depart for the recess, extending regulatory uncertainty into the autumn session or into 2027.
Beyond the procedural dynamics, the CLARITY Act sits at the center of a broader U.S. regulatory dialogue around crypto markets, with implications for licensing pathways, investor protection, and cross-border compliance. If enacted, the act could influence how crypto firms register, disclose, and operate within a framework that intersects with existing enforcement priorities from the SEC, CFTC, and DOJ. In parallel, the industry context includes ongoing policy objectives in the European Union through MiCA, and firms are weighing how U.S. regulatory clarity might align with or diverge from international standards for cross-border activity and banking relationships.
The unresolved ethics and illicit-finance provisions are repeatedly cited as pivotal to securing bipartisan support. The field-facing consequences for exchanges, custodians, and DeFi actors hinge on the text’s final balance between innovation, consumer protections, and enforcement controls. As the policy process continues, financial institutions and crypto firms must assess how regulatory clarity—or its absence—affects licensing determinations, onboarding of customers, and international collaboration on compliant product offerings.
According to Cointelegraph reporting, the combination of floor timing, amendment dynamics, and unresolved policy language will determine whether the CLARITY Act gains momentum before the August recess or stalls in the current session. The outcome will reverberate through compliance workflows, risk assessments, and strategic planning for firms navigating a changing regulatory landscape.
For a broader policy perspective on DeFi and non-custodial models, readers may consult Cointelegraph Magazine’s feature exploring how the CLARITY Act could redefine regulatory paths for non-custodial DeFi in the United States.
What to watch next remains tightly focused on legislative scheduling, the evolution of ethics and illicit-finance provisions, and the degree to which Senate leaders can align the text with the Agriculture Committee’s version and the House’s stance—an alignment that could unlock or further delay regulatory clarity for the industry.
Looking ahead, the path to regulatory clarity for U.S. crypto markets hinges on concrete floor action in July, decisive progress on contentious provisions, and the ability to reconcile divergent legislative texts before lawmakers retreat for the August recess. Absent a timely vote, regulatory timing and the associated compliance planning will likely extend into the 2027 session.
This article was originally published as Galaxy trims CLARITY Act passage odds to 60% as deadline nears on Crypto Breaking News – your trusted source for crypto news, Bitcoin news, and blockchain updates.


