New York, May 15, 2026, 04:48 (EDT)
- Shares of Coinbase, Robinhood, and Strategy all climbed roughly 5% in the latest U.S. session, reacting to a Senate panel’s move to advance a significant crypto market-structure bill.
- Bitcoin stayed north of $80,000 early Friday, keeping the related stocks in play as liquid stand-ins for digital-asset risk.
- Prediction markets continued to tilt in favor of passage, though the bill remains tangled in Senate, House, and broader political challenges.
Shares of Coinbase Global, Robinhood Markets, and Strategy climbed as the Senate Banking Committee pushed a long-delayed crypto bill forward. Investors finally saw a more straightforward case to get into U.S.-listed crypto stocks after months of choppy regulatory back-and-forth.
The Digital Asset Market Clarity Act is in focus now because it would finally spell out which powers go to the Securities and Exchange Commission and which fall to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission—the primary U.S. watchdogs. That kind of clarity means exchanges and brokers could face less uncertainty around enforcement, potentially opening the door for new products. For Strategy, the catalyst is more straightforward: bitcoin has climbed back above $80,000.
Coinbase ended Thursday at $212.01, climbing 5.1%. Robinhood advanced 5.2% to finish at $80.70, and Strategy added 5.0%, closing at $186.97. Early Friday, Bitcoin hovered around $80,623.
The Senate Banking Committee pushed the Clarity Act forward on a 15-9 vote, clearing it for debate on the Senate floor. Chairman Tim Scott called the bill a way to bring digital assets “into the sunlight with clear rules”—words that resonated with a market eager for legislative direction. United States Senate Banking Committee
Coinbase saw the biggest upside in the trade. As the operator of the largest publicly traded U.S. crypto exchange, the company has lobbied Congress to clarify whether tokens count as securities, commodities, or fall into a different box. “Let’s get CLARITY done,” Chief Executive Brian Armstrong posted after the vote. X (formerly Twitter)
Robinhood’s results cut both ways on the broader theme. The company’s crypto revenue slid 47% year-over-year in the first quarter, landing at $134 million. On the flip side, “other transaction” revenue—mostly from event contracts—soared 320%, reaching $147 million. More definitive crypto regulation won’t magically revive sluggish trading, but it could benefit a firm that’s leaning harder into crypto, prediction markets, and products for active traders. Robinhood Markets, Inc.
Strategy, often seen as the bitcoin beta name, added 535 bitcoin last week—spending roughly $43 million, according to a new filing. The purchases came from proceeds raised via at-the-market share sales, which allow companies to drip shares into the market over time. The company now holds 818,869 bitcoin, bought at an average price of $75,540.
Peers tracked the same move. Crypto miner Marathon Digital climbed too, traders rotating into names linked to bitcoin and regulatory momentum in the U.S. Still, business lines look different: Coinbase generates revenue from exchanges and services; Robinhood, a retail brokerage, has crypto and event-contract exposure; Strategy mainly holds bitcoin on its balance sheet as a listed vehicle.
Prediction markets offered a glimpse into the momentum behind the rally. On a Coinbase market tied to Kalshi, traders assigned a 70% chance that U.S. crypto market-structure legislation will arrive “before 2027.” Over at Polymarket, the odds for the Clarity Act being signed into law in 2026 landed at 68%. These prices don’t constitute forecasts—they simply reflect where participants are betting. Coinbase
Analysts aren’t calling this vote the endgame. Galaxy’s Alex Thorn, in a note before the markup, suggested this week could “prove decisive” for the bill’s fate. Elliptic’s David Carlisle, for his part, described moving through committee as a “critical step,” but pointed to the divided vote as a sign that obstacles remain. Galaxy
There’s a chance the market’s pace has outstripped the law here. The bill faces hurdles: Senate approval, possible merging with House proposals, and it’ll need significant Democratic support to clear procedural roadblocks. Banks are lobbying for stricter caps on stablecoin rewards. On the other hand, some Democrats are pushing for more robust anti-money-laundering and ethics requirements.
Right now, it’s all about having options. Coinbase and Robinhood could see a regulatory shakeup. Strategy rides the bitcoin wave. That’s driving all three stocks higher, despite the differences in what each company represents.