Thursday, March 5, 2026

Lawmakers are preparing to try again on major bill. What can happen next

The US Capitol in Washington, DC, US, on Thursday, Dec. 11, 2025.

Daniel Heuer | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Lawmakers this week plan to revisit efforts to pass a market structure bill that will determine the crypto industry’s future in the U.S. — reviving legislative efforts that stagnated last year.

On Thursday, the Senate Agriculture and Banking Committees are expected to hold hearings on their respective parts of the crypto bill, where they might revise the text. This will lay the groundwork for establishing legislative guardrails for digital assets in the U.S. — a potential watershed moment for the crypto industry.

This is what you need to know about the market structure bill and efforts to pass it.

The bill’s objective

What’s happening this week

Lawmakers will attempt to hash out three key issues this week: stablecoin-linked rewards; the treatment of decentralized finance platforms and their developers; and the matter of blocking elected officials such as President Donald Trump from profiting off of crypto ventures. Trump-affiliated entities have launched both a memecoin and nonfungible token in the past.

The stablecoin issue is “the biggest outstanding issue” for negotiations on the Hill, said Cody Carbone, CEO of crypto trade association Digital Chamber.

“Stablecoin rewards, interest, yields, whatever you want to call it, will be addressed in the bill,” Carbone said. “Both Republicans and Democrats have come to that conclusion.”

In early January, the American Bankers Association’s Community Bankers Council wrote to Senate members, asking them to prevent stablecoin issuer affiliates from offering rewards to customers. The stablecoin products, they said, exploit a loophole in the stablecoin-centric Genius Act passed last year that prohibits dollar-pegged tokens that offer yields to holders — which pose an attractive alternative to high-yield savings accounts and other traditional products. 

On the DeFi front, crypto advocates are fighting to ensure developers do not face prosecution when their technology is used for illicit activities like money laundering.

“We’re very conscious of how illicit finance is treated in the bill… but we need to make sure that there are not obligations put on codes instead of person, or make sure that there isn’t some inadvertent way that the technology is burdened in a way that it can’t comply,” DeFi Education Fund chief legal officer Amanda Tuminelli told CNBC. 

DeFi advocates also want to ensure the market structure bill contains language allowing individuals to self-custody their crypto. In addition, they want provisions from the Blockchain Regulatory Certainty Act that call for software developers and blockchain service providers who do not control or custody customer funds to be exempt from registering as money-transmitting businesses. 

Finally, some lawmakers like Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) want to prevent public officials from profiting off of digital asset ventures while they serve.

“ It’s a really hard issue,” Mersinger said. “They ended up kind of punting [on] it in the House because it was really difficult to put on the bill. A lot of Senate Democrats have said, ‘We’re not going to punt on this issue.'” 

‘Key window’

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