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Chris Perkins, Managing Partner at CoinFund, said the crypto sector does not depend on the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act to continue operating and attracting investment. He pointed to recent joint guidance from federal regulators as evidence that sufficient direction already exists.
In March 2026, Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Paul Atkins and Commodity Futures Trading Commission Chair Michael Selig issued a joint interpretation on how federal securities laws apply to digital assets. Perkins stated that this agency-level coordination is shaping policy and precedent on a daily basis.
He added that even if the CLARITY Act does not advance, the industry will remain stable. His remarks also signal that CoinFund’s investment strategy is not tied to the bill’s legislative outcome.
Debate in Washington has focused on defining the boundary between SEC and CFTC oversight of digital assets. While recent guidance has clarified aspects of enforcement and classification, statutory law has yet to formally allocate jurisdiction.
The CLARITY Act proposes a structured framework to determine whether a digital asset qualifies as a security or a commodity. It would assign regulatory authority accordingly and introduce compliance pathways for issuers and exchanges not fully addressed under existing securities or commodities statutes.
The legislation also addresses decentralized finance protocols, yield-bearing products, and criteria for when a token transitions from security status to commodity status as decentralization increases. Some provisions have drawn scrutiny from lawmakers concerned about scope and retail investor protections.
Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott previously indicated the bill was nearing committee consideration in May 2026. However, unified support within the committee has not been assured, and the broader timeline remains uncertain.
In the absence of enacted legislation, the SEC and CFTC continue operating under current laws, relying on inter-agency coordination for classification questions. This coordination does not provide a binding safe harbor for issuers or trading platforms.
Coinbase previously declined to support an earlier draft of the CLARITY Act, citing concerns with specific provisions. Perkins’ position reflects a view within parts of the institutional segment that regulatory progress can continue without immediate statutory reform.