Arthur Hayes Explains Why Trump Should Veto the Clarity Act

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7 Min Read


Regulations

Arthur Hayes commented on why Bitcoin does not need the CLARITY Act to survive, and why passing it would undermine the very thing that makes Bitcoin worth holding.

Key Takeaways

  • Hayes: Bitcoin does not need regulation to survive; if it did, it would be worthless.
  • CLARITY Act: Hayes hopes Trump vetoes it if it reaches his desk.
  • Banks should offer Bitcoin products to clients, but institutionalizing Bitcoin is different.
  • Regulated Bitcoin products introduce counterparty risk Bitcoin was built to eliminate.

Hayes draws a distinction that most regulatory commentary collapses: banks should be allowed to offer Bitcoin products because their clients want them, but designing regulatory infrastructure to make Bitcoin institutionally acceptable is a different project, and one that produces a product with counterparty risk Bitcoin was specifically built to remove.

Banks want to offer crypto because clients want non-correlated assets that have performed well in inflationary environments and periods of fiat expansion. That is a legitimate business case and Hayes does not dispute it. What he disputes is the leap from allowing banks to offer the product to building a regulatory architecture that makes Bitcoin a normalized component of the financial system.

On the CLARITY Act specifically, Hayes states directly that he hopes Trump vetoes it if it reaches his desk. The objection is not to all regulation but to a specific legislative framework that, in his reading, formalizes Bitcoin’s integration into the same institutional infrastructure it was designed to operate outside. His broader point is that Bitcoin does not need regulatory legitimacy to have value: if it did, it would not be worth anything, because the value comes precisely from operating without it.

What a Fugazi Derivative Actually Is

The “fugazi derivative” framing is precise in a way the word Ponzi is not: a fugazi derivative is not fraudulent, it is a real financial instrument that replicates the exposure of an asset while introducing the failure modes of the institution holding it, and that is exactly what a regulated Bitcoin product on a bank’s balance sheet provides.

Hayes uses the term to describe derivatives sitting on financial system member balance sheets, distinguishing them from Bitcoin itself, which carries no counterparty risk. A client holding a bank’s Bitcoin product has exposure to Bitcoin’s price and exposure to the bank’s solvency simultaneously. The derivative version carries the counterparty risk of every institution in the custody chain.

Hayes frames this as what the financial system already has. The distinction he is drawing is between a client owning Bitcoin and a client owning a claim on Bitcoin that is only as good as the institution making it.

What 15 Years of Bitcoin Development Would Mean Under This Framework

If Bitcoin’s value proposition is its resistance to institutional failure, then a Bitcoin product that goes to zero when a small bank collapses has not extended Bitcoin’s reach: it has created a new way to lose money that happens to reference Bitcoin’s price. Hayes states this directly: “What you’ve actually built for the last 15 years is a zero.” If Bitcoin’s destination is a regulated financial product on a bank’s balance sheet, the decentralized infrastructure built around it was unnecessary. Analytically, a regulated custodial product could have been constructed without Bitcoin’s decentralized architecture, which means the 15 years of development Hayes references only matters if the non-custodial, unregulated version is what survives.

If the CLARITY Act passes and Trump signs it before the end of the current legislative session, the regulatory framework Hayes objects to becomes law and his thesis is tested against whether institutional adoption drives Bitcoin’s value higher despite the counterparty risk he identifies. If Trump vetoes it as Hayes hopes, the test is deferred and Bitcoin continues operating outside the framework Hayes argues it does not need.


The information provided in this article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Coindoo.com does not endorse or recommend any specific investment strategy or cryptocurrency. Always conduct your own research and consult with a licensed financial advisor before making any investment decisions.

Author

Kosta has reported on cryptocurrency markets and blockchain infrastructure since 2020, bringing over six years of hands-on experience in the crypto industry built through daily tracking of markets, trends, and emerging blockchain developments. Specializing in Bitcoin on-chain analysis, institutional ETF flows, and digital asset price action, his work at Coindoo has been cited by other news agencies and consistently covers market developments with a focus on data-driven reporting across Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, and XRP.

Over the years, Kosta has contributed to multiple crypto media outlets in different regions, authoring over 6,000 articles across the sector. His reporting spans cryptocurrency markets and the broader fintech industry, tracking not only price action but also the technological and regulatory forces shaping the ecosystem.

To support his analysis, Kosta actively leverages on-chain data and metrics from leading platforms such as Santiment, Glassnode, and CryptoQuant, enabling deeper, evidence-based market insights. He believes in the power of transparency and the data that underpins the blockchain ecosystem.

His academic background in Marketing Management from Denmark further complements his analytical approach, adding a strong understanding of communication strategy and content positioning to his work.



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