Ripple’s Chief Legal Officer, Stuart Alderoty, has voiced strong support for the Digital Asset Market Structure Clarity Act (CLARITY Act), introduced on May 29, 2025, as a necessary turning point for U.S. crypto regulation. Calling the legislation a “smart, workable framework,” Alderoty emphasized that “clarity shouldn’t be controversial”, underscoring the bill’s potential to end regulatory confusion that continues to stifle innovation in the digital asset industry.

A Bipartisan Push for a Predictable Crypto Framework

Introduced by a coalition of U.S. lawmakers from both parties—including Representatives French Hill, Glenn Thompson, Angie Craig, Dusty Johnson, Don Davis, Bryan Steil, Ritchie Torres, and Warren Davidson—the CLARITY Act aims to delineate the roles of the SEC and CFTC.

Key among the bill’s provisions is the classification of most digital assets as virtual commodities, placing them under CFTC oversight, rather than treating them as securities, as the SEC currently does. This shift could significantly ease compliance burdens for crypto projects and pave the way for broader U.S. adoption.

Safe Harbor for Startups and Mature Blockchains

A major highlight of the bill is its four-year safe harbor for primary token offerings, provided the blockchain project is “mature” and raises no more than $75 million within 12 months. This legal breathing room is designed to allow early-stage crypto ventures to grow without immediate fear of enforcement.

Alderoty, speaking on behalf of Ripple, backed the safe harbor provision and reiterated the company’s commitment to regulatory clarity, especially in the wake of ongoing legal proceedings with the SEC over the status of XRP.

Ripple Responds to Hester Peirce’s “New Paradigm”

In response to SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce’s recent remarks questioning the classification of digital assets in secondary markets, Ripple sent a detailed letter to the SEC. It urged the Commission to clarify when a digital asset is no longer part of an investment contract.

Ripple cited legal expert Lewis Cohen, whose securities law analysis argues that routine secondary market transactions of fungible crypto assets do not meet the legal definition of securities.

A Call for Innovation-Friendly Regulation

As Bitcoin and Ethereum markets mature and mainstream adoption increases, the timing of the CLARITY Act is seen as vital. With backing from both industry leaders and legislators, the bill could mark a new era of clear and adaptive crypto regulation in the U.S.

According to Ripple’s Alderoty, this legislation provides the best opportunity yet to balance innovation with consumer protection—a vision that could steer the global conversation on digital assets.

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