For years, the debate over digital asset regulation in the United States was framed as a battle between "pro-innovation" pioneers and "pro-consumer" watchdogs. But as we move through 2026, it has become clear that this was a false dichotomy. By failing to establish a comprehensive federal market structure framework, we have achieved neither goal. Instead, we have created a safety vacuum that is simultaneously driving American capital and innovation abroad, and leaving American investors more vulnerable than ever.
The numbers bear this out: between 2022 and 2025, U.S. based crypto venture capital funding dropped by 58%, while offshore destinations absorbed an estimated $42 billion in capital that would otherwise have stayed domestic (a16z State of Crypto 2025). Chainalysis data shows that 68% of measurable U.S. crypto trading volume migrated to offshore platforms during the same period, platforms outside the jurisdiction of U.S. investor protection law.
The House of Representatives has already laid the groundwork with the bipartisan passage of the
The global landscape has shifted. While the Senate inches forward, global peers have moved toward "regulation by architecture." The European Union’s MiCA framework is now fully operational, and hubs from Singapore to the UAE have built regimes that treat crypto not as a legal anomaly, but as a permanent pillar of modern finance. These nations have realized that the prize for the 21st century is the right to set the "rules of the road" for the world’s new financial highway system.
The UAE’s Virtual Asset Regulatory Authority (VARA), launched in 2023, is a case study in regulatory velocity. By the end of 2025, the UAE registered over 2,100 licensed digital asset entities, a 17-fold increase from 120 in 2020. Dubai now hosts more than 950 active blockchain companies and processed an estimated $25 billion in digital asset flows in 2025 alone (VARA Annual Report 2025). Singapore followed a similar arc, growing from 95 registered entities in 2020 to over 1,700 by 2025. Meanwhile, new U.S. crypto company formations fell from a peak of approximately 1,900 in 2022 to an estimated 640 in 2026, as founders increasingly incorporate offshore to avoid regulatory ambiguity at home.
If the Senate does not act to finalize the CLARITY Act, U.S. consumers will be forced to drive on roads built by someone else, using their own standards, privacy controls, and currencies.
The result of this inaction is a strategic "brain drain" that is both economic and ethical. When American builders move abroad, they take with them the high standards of U.S. compliance. By pushing the digital asset economy offshore, we aren't protecting the domestic investor; we are effectively forcing them to seek services in jurisdictions that offer little to no legal recourse.
The quantifiable cost of this regulatory vacuum is substantial. A 2025 analysis by Andreessen Horowitz estimates that $42 billion in crypto-focused VC investment left the United States between 2022 and 2025 to jurisdictions with clearer regulatory frameworks. The U.S. Treasury has estimated foregone annual tax revenue at approximately $9.4 billion annually. An Electric Capital analysis found that roughly 28,000 blockchain developers relocated internationally in the same period, representing a multi-billion-dollar knowledge drain in future productive capacity. These are not hypothetical projections. They are the documented, measurable cost of delay.
In a traditional U.S. brokerage, if a firm fails, there are clear, established pathways to recovery. But when a U.S. retail investor is forced to use an unregulated offshore exchange because domestic options are stifled by legal uncertainty, they are one "liquidity crunch" away from total loss.
A secure market structure is the only way to provide a safe, well regulated space for both institutional and retail investors. This requires the foundational guardrails provided by a solid market structure bill.
The Senate has the opportunity to turn this tide. By finishing the work started in the House, it can establish a unified federal framework that cements the United States’ status as the most powerful financial system globally. Safety and competitiveness are not competing interests; they are two sides of the same coin. It is time for the Senate to pass a bipartisan market structure act and make the American digital market the most secure and transparent in the world.
This story was published under HackerNoon’s Business Blogging Program.
