Trump Issues an Ultimatum to Wall Street

// Politics
Reading time: 2 min
Published: Mar 07, 2026 at 21:13
The focus of this pressure is the CLARITY Act

The legislative gridlock in Washington took a surreal turn today, March 7, 2026, as President Trump leveraged his social media platform to issue a direct order to the banking industry: "Make a good deal with the Crypto Industry."

The focus of this pressure is the CLARITY Act (Clarity for Lawful and Robust Infrastructure and Technology in Yield), a landmark market structure bill designed to provide a definitive legal framework for stablecoins and digital asset exchanges. The President's intervention comes at a critical moment, as traditional banks have been lobbying to water down the bill’s provisions regarding "yield-bearing" digital assets.

By siding with the crypto industry, the administration is effectively treating digital asset infrastructure as a matter of national security and "tech sovereignty." The CLARITY Act aims to end the "Regulation by Enforcement" era once and for all, mandating a clear path for tokens to transition from securities to commodities once they achieve sufficient decentralization.

This "ultimatum" has forced a flurry of weekend meetings between SEC officials, major bank CEOs, and crypto lobbyists. If the bill passes in its current "pro-crypto" form, it would likely trigger the mass-issuance of regulated, bank-backed stablecoins, effectively merging the $150 billion stablecoin market with the multi-trillion dollar commercial banking sector. In 2026, the question is no longer if crypto will be regulated, but whether Wall Street or Silicon Valley will hold the keys to the new digital dollar.

pexels-pixabay-259027.jpg

Disclaimer. The data provided is collected by the author and is not sponsored by any company or token developer. This is not a recommendation to buy or sell cryptocurrency and should not be viewed as an endorsement by Coinidol.com. Readers should do their research before investing in funds.

Author
Tomas Duda

Show comments(0 comments)