Start now →

Bitcoin is stuck in a rut but JPMorgan says new legislation could be the ultimate spark

By Will Canny · Published February 28, 2026 · 5 min read · Source: CoinDesk
BitcoinAI & Crypto
Policy이 기사 공유하기X (Twitter)LinkedInFacebook이메일

Bitcoin is stuck in a rut but JPMorgan says new legislation could be the ultimate spark

JPMorgan said the long-awaited Clarity Act would bring regulatory clarity, boost institutional participation and accelerate tokenization across U.S. crypto markets.

작성자 Will Canny, AI Boost|편집자 Aoyon Ashraf 2026년 2월 28일 오후 7:00 AI 번역GoogleMake us preferred on Google
The U.S. Capitol.
Movement on the crypto market structure bill is needed to revive investor participation. (CoinDesk)

What to know:

Crypto markets have lacked conviction, as traders struggle to identify a catalyst strong enough to lift prices out of their current lull. Bitcoin has remained range-bound around mid-$60,000, while ether is trading around $2,000, and volumes across major exchanges have thinned.

The digital assets market is thirsty for a solid catalyst, and JPMorgan says it has identified one — market structure legislation in the U.S., called the Clarity Act.

"While sentiment remains negative in crypto markets, we continue to believe that a potential approval of the market structure legislation most likely by mid year could serve as a positive catalyst for crypto markets into the second half of the year," analysts led by Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou said in a report.

While the market faces broader hesitation among both retail and institutional participants, regulatory ambiguity has also weighed on sentiment, leaving larger investors cautious about deploying new capital.

Market participants say that without tangible progress on a coherent regulatory framework, sidelined capital is unlikely to return in force. This is where the Clarity Act would be a decisive catalyst for the digital assets market, according to JPMorgan.

A comprehensive framework defining oversight, token classifications and exchange obligations would remove one of the biggest overhangs on the asset class: uncertainty. With clearer rules of the road, large asset managers, pension funds and corporate treasuries that have so far remained cautious could gain the confidence and compliance cover to increase allocations.

That wave of institutional participation, in turn, could deepen liquidity, compress volatility and unlock new product development, from structured offerings to broader tokenized assets.

A bill stuck in limbo

At its core, the proposed bill would define oversight across the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), classifying tokens as either digital commodities or securities.

The bank's analysts said placing major tokens under CFTC jurisdiction would reduce compliance burdens and legal uncertainty. A “grandfather” clause would allow certain tokens tied to spot exchange-traded funds listed before Jan. 1, 2026, including XRP, solana, litecoin, hedera, dogecoin and chainlink, to be treated as commodities.

The proposal would also let new projects raise up to $75 million annually without full SEC registration, subject to disclosure rules. The analysts said that the grace period could revive onshore issuance, venture funding and deal activity that has shifted overseas.

However, the leading U.S. effort to establish the federal crypto rules has stalled in the Senate after months of talks and missed timelines, leaving the bill in limbo as lawmakers wrangle over key provisions.

A scheduled Senate Banking Committee markup was postponed in early 2026 after Coinbase (COIN), the largest U.S. crypto exchange, publicly withdrew its support for the bill, saying the current text could hamper innovation, weaken competition, and restrict features like stablecoin rewards.

Coinbase’s opposition exposed divisions among industry players and lawmakers, even as some analysts and banking voices say the bill’s core goals, clearer SEC/CFTC oversight and defined regulatory pathways, keep momentum alive.

Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong said earlier this month that banking trade groups, rather than individual banks, were largely responsible for the stalled talks over U.S. crypto market structure legislation.

In a market still heavily driven by sentiment and flows, a decisive regulatory breakthrough could act as a powerful catalyst, the kind that doesn’t just steady prices, but potentially propels them sharply higher.

Read more: From Wall Street to Web3: This is crypto’s year of integration, Silicon Valley Bank says

Market Structure Legislationcrypto regulationJPMorganTokenizationStablecoinsAI Disclaimer: Parts of this article were generated with the assistance from AI tools and reviewed by our editorial team to ensure accuracy and adherence to our standards. For more information, see CoinDesk's full AI Policy.

More For You

U.S. Senate Democrats asked Treasury, DOJ to probe Binance's illicit finance controls

By Jesse Hamilton|Edited by Nikhilesh De20 hours agoSenators Richard Blumenthal and Elizabeth Warren are among lawmakers pursuing probes into Binance. (Jesse Hamilton/CoinDesk)

Nine lawmakers asked the federal agencies to investigate the global crypto exchange after reports of potential funding channeled to terrorist groups.

What to know:

Read full storyLatest Crypto News Map of Iran with a pin just north of Esfahan. (Tudoran Andrei/Shutterstock)

Iran crisis puts the regime's $7.8 billion crypto shadow economy in spotlight

21 minutes ago
Christian Catalini (Chainlink Labs)

The 'stablecoin sandwich' is dead: Why the next phase of crypto payments is all about the user relationship

1 hour ago
Shipping vessel at sea (Getty Images/Unsplash+/Modified by CoinDesk)

Crypto community fear of Iran choking oil supply and crashing markets may be overblown

3 hours ago
Mt Gox

Former Mt. Gox CEO proposed a rewrite of bitcoin's code to recover $5 billion in stolen funds. Gets quickly shutdown

4 hours ago
(Photo by hosein charbaghi on Unsplash/Modified by CoinDesk)

Suspected insiders make over $1.2 million on Polymarket by betting on U.S.'s Iran strike

4 hours ago
CoinDesk

XRP tumbles 9% as break below $1.36 wipes out relief rally

5 hours ago
Top StoriesRanked warplanes on the ground.

Bitcoin nears $63,000 as U.S. and Israel launch strikes on Iran

12 hours ago
BTC Funding Rate (Coinglass)

Bitcoin sets up potential short squeeze as 'funding rate' plunges to three month low

8 hours ago
Oil

Oil-linked futures on Hyperliquid surge 5% after U.S.-Israel strike on Iran

8 hours ago
Hands rest on the keyboard of a laptop showing trading graphs, data. (Kanchanara / Unsplash modified by CoinDesk)

Bitcoin could see further downside risks as Iran attacks U.S. bases across Middle East

8 hours ago
Bitcoin bus (Photo: Olivier Acuna/Modified by CoinDesk)

Bitcoin's five-month slide: why BTC is set for worst losing streak since 2018

6 hours ago
XRP token glitch (CoinDesk)

AI tool catches critical XRP Ledger bug that could have drained wallets

Feb 27, 2026
This article was originally published on CoinDesk and is republished here under RSS syndication for informational purposes. All rights and intellectual property remain with the original author. If you are the author and wish to have this article removed, please contact us at [email protected].

NexaPay — Accept Card Payments, Receive Crypto

No KYC · Instant Settlement · Visa, Mastercard, Apple Pay, Google Pay

Get Started →