Key Highlights
- Coinbase shares traded at $184.54 by 13:37 UTC, up $10.01, or 5.7%, from the previous close.
- The CLARITY Act cleared the House in July 2025 by a 294-134 vote and remains one of the biggest pending crypto market-structure bills in Washington.
- Coinbase and Washington officials have both renewed pressure for passage after months of Senate delays over stablecoin rewards language.
Coinbase Global shares rose over 5% on Tuesday as investors reacted to fresh momentum around the CLARITY Act, the bill that could finally define how digital assets are regulated in the United States. COIN traded at $184.54 by 13:37 UTC, up $10.01, on the day after opening at $180.21, according to Google search market data.

The stock move comes as political support for the bill has picked up again after months of deadlock. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent last week urged Congress to pass the CLARITY Act, arguing that unclear U.S. rules have pushed crypto development and investment to overseas markets with more defined frameworks.
Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong also recently said it is “time to pass the Clarity Act,” signaling that the exchange is once again publicly behind the legislation.
Why the bill matters for Coinbase
The Senate version of the legislation, introduced in January, is meant to clarify when a digital asset should be treated as a security, a commodity, or another category altogether. It would also give the Commodity Futures Trading Commission broader authority over spot crypto markets, a longstanding priority for much of the industry.
For Coinbase, this kind of framework could ease one of the market’s biggest overhangs on the business: regulatory uncertainty around token listings, trading, and customer-facing crypto services in the U.S.
The bill also matters directly to Coinbase’s economics because of the fight over stablecoin rewards. In March, Senate talks hit a new impasse after banks pushed for tighter limits on yield-like rewards tied to stablecoins, saying such incentives could pull deposits from the traditional banking system.
Coinbase has argued it needs room to offer customer rewards and other incentives, making the outcome especially important for exchanges tied to stablecoin distribution and usage.
Senate remains the key hurdle
The House already passed the CLARITY Act on July 17, 2025, by a 294-134 vote. In January, Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott released bipartisan negotiated bill text and said it was time to move forward with markup. But progress later slowed as lawmakers, banks, and crypto firms clashed over stablecoin rewards and other provisions.
This leaves Coinbase trading not only on crypto market sentiment, but also on whether Washington can finally turn years of lobbying into law. Recent rally suggests investors are again willing to price in a more favorable regulatory path if the CLARITY Act can clear its Senate hurdles in the weeks ahead.
Also Read: The CLARITY Act Countdown: Will the Senate Deliver a Crypto Win or Run Out the Clock?
