This is a contributor content by Tal Elyashiv, Founder of SPiCE VC.
When the White House said digital assets would ‘take off like a rocket ship’ once the CLARITY Act passes, markets reacted the way markets do: Bitcoin rallied, commentary flooded in, and the word ‘historic’ appeared in approximately every third headline. I’ve been investing in blockchain infrastructure since 2017. My read is more measured.
Legislation matters. But the question serious investors should be asking isn’t whether the CLARITY Act passes, it’s whether the underlying market structure is ready to absorb what clarity is supposed to enable.
The CLARITY Act, if enacted as currently drafted, would establish jurisdictional boundaries between the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission for digital assets, provide clearer criteria for when a token is a commodity versus a security, and create a defined path for digital asset exchanges to register and operate. Those are meaningful changes. They resolve years of enforcement-by-ambiguity that has kept institutional capital on the sidelines and pushed legitimate projects offshore.
But legislation is not infrastructure. And infrastructure is what moves markets.
Consider what happened after the spot Bitcoin exchange-traded fund approvals in January 2024. The SEC’s decision was described as a watershed moment. BlackRock, Fidelity and Invesco launched ETF products within days. By March, the iShares Bitcoin Trust had crossed $10 billion in assets under management faster than any ETF in history. Price followed institutional flows, not the reverse. The regulatory event mattered, but what converted that event into sustained price appreciation was the distribution infrastructure, the custody rails and the compliance frameworks that institutional buyers required before they could allocate.
The CLARITY Act creates a similar setup. If it passes, tokenized securities, compliant digital asset exchanges and on-chain settlement infrastructure become significantly more viable at institutional scale. The real-world asset tokenization market was estimated at roughly $185 billion as of mid-2024 according to data aggregated by rwa.xyz, a figure that includes tokenized Treasuries, private credit and real estate. McKinsey projected that number could reach $2 trillion by 2030 under favorable regulatory conditions. Clarity is a prerequisite for that trajectory, not a guarantee of it.
What’s still missing, and what the CLARITY Act does not address, is the market structure layer. Tokenized assets need liquid secondary markets, standardized settlement protocols and interoperable custody infrastructure before institutional allocators can treat them like a functioning asset class. Right now, many tokenized securities trade in thin, fragmented markets with settlement rails that don’t connect to the prime brokerage and fund administration systems that large investors depend on. Regulatory clarity tells you what you’re allowed to build. It doesn’t build it.
This is the dynamic I’d call buy the rumor, sell the news, not because the legislation is empty, but because the gap between what the law enables and what the market can operationalize is larger than current enthusiasm accounts for. We saw a version of this in 2022 when the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets regulation began moving toward finalization. Sentiment around compliant digital asset issuance in Europe improved significantly. But the actual volume of regulated tokenized security issuance in EU markets remained modest through 2023, because the exchanges, custodians and legal frameworks required to transact those instruments were still being built.
None of this means the CLARITY Act is priced in and the trade is over. It means the trade is more nuanced than a single legislative catalyst.
The firms that will benefit most from regulatory clarity aren’t necessarily the ones with the highest trading volume today. They are the ones building the settlement rails, the compliance infrastructure, the custody architecture and the secondary market liquidity mechanisms that make a regulated digital asset market function at scale. Those are the structural enablers. They are less visible than token prices, and they are harder to model in a retail portfolio, but they are where durable value accretes in technological revolutions.
Stablecoin infrastructure is one example. On-chain settlement infrastructure is another. Institutional-grade custody that integrates with existing fund accounting systems is a third. These aren’t exciting in the way that a White House endorsement is exciting. They are, however, what converts a legal framework into a functioning market.
The CLARITY Act, if it passes, will matter. The question worth sitting with is what the market will look like 18 months after it passes, and whether the infrastructure required to make clarity actionable is in place by then. Based on where the buildout stands today, that work is well underway but not finished.
Clear rules are necessary. They are not sufficient. The investors who understand that distinction will be better positioned than the ones who bought the rocket ship.
The article “The CLARITY Act Won’t Make or Break Digital Assets Infrastructure Will” was first published on AlexaBlockchain. Read the complete article here: https://alexablockchain.com/clarity-act-wont-make-or-break-digital-assets-infrastructure-will/
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