Though Witt wouldn’t identify the topics that have been settled in the ongoing talks, he said that the negotiations “made considerable progress in the background” while the yield argument between banks and crypto firms got most of the attention.

“We’re very close to closing them out,” he said. “All of these issues felt intractable and unsolvable at one point in time. So the fact that we’ve been able to close out a lot of them gives me confidence that we can close out these other ones, too.”

The Clarity Act would need a markup hearing in the Senate Banking Committee before it can be advanced toward a final Senate vote. It had been close to such a hearing at the beginning of the year, but the bank lobbyists raised objections to stablecoin yield that delayed the process.

Last week, White House economists issued a report that downplayed the threats the banking sector contended are posed by giving stablecoin holders a return that resembles interest from a bank account. On Monday, the American Bankers Association answered back, saying the White House argument was flawed. Witt said the view of bankers is wide-ranging, depending on how close they are to the technology.

“They’re grappling with it,” he said. “These are all important issues to their members.

And, you know, some of them are going to view stablecoins more positively. Some are going to be a little bit more threatened by them.”

Read More: Trump’s crypto adviser rejects Jamie Dimon on treating yield-bearing stablecoins like banks

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SEC Chairman Paul Atkins (Jesse Hamilton/CoinDesk)

The latest crypto view from the securities agency concludes software that clears the way for securities transactions with individual wallets won’t trip regulations.

What to know:

  • The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has issued another crypto-world policy statement, with the staff finding that broker regulations won’t be triggered by software interfaces allowing users securities transactions through self-hosted wallets.
  • The statement doesn’t have the force of a rule and joins an increasingly lengthy list of similar findings…

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