- Arthur Hayes says Trump should veto the CLARITY Act if it reaches his desk
- Hayes argues Bitcoin does not need regulatory approval to prove its value
- The debate is exposing deeper divisions over crypto’s future inside traditional finance
Arthur Hayes is once again saying the quiet part out loud, except not quietly at all. Speaking with Scott Melker on The Wolf of All Streets, the BitMEX co-founder said he hopes President Donald Trump vetoes the CLARITY Act outright if the legislation ever reaches the White House.
No hedging, no carefully balanced political language, just a direct rejection of the idea that crypto needs deeper integration into the traditional regulatory system to survive. And honestly, the argument is sparking a much bigger conversation than just one bill.

Hayes Thinks Regulation Changes What Bitcoin Actually Is
At the center of Hayes’ criticism is a pretty blunt philosophical point. If Bitcoin truly required government-approved regulatory frameworks to function properly, then what exactly has the crypto industry spent the last 15 years building?
According to Hayes, Bitcoin already proved it works precisely because it exists outside the traditional financial system. Wrapping it in layers of compliance, institutional custody, and banking infrastructure risks transforming it from a decentralized monetary alternative into just another financial product sitting inside the same fragile system crypto originally tried to escape.
That’s really the core fear here. Once Bitcoin becomes deeply embedded inside banks, ETFs, and regulated financial structures, it starts inheriting the same counterparty risks and institutional weaknesses that exist throughout legacy finance already.
Hayes Says Banks Offering Crypto Isn’t The Real Problem
Interestingly, Hayes isn’t actually attacking banks themselves for entering crypto. He openly acknowledged that banks offering Bitcoin exposure to clients makes perfect business sense. Clients want access to an asset that historically performed well during periods of inflation and aggressive monetary expansion, and banks naturally want to profit from providing that exposure.
His issue is something slightly different. Hayes argues there’s a major distinction between allowing banks to offer crypto products and redesigning the entire crypto ecosystem around the operational needs of large financial institutions.
Those are not the same thing, even if the industry increasingly treats them like they are.
In Hayes’ view, regulation aimed at making Bitcoin fit comfortably inside existing financial structures risks slowly stripping away the very characteristics that made the asset valuable in the first place.

The CLARITY Act Has Become A Symbol Of A Bigger Divide
The debate around the CLARITY Act now feels less like a technical legislative discussion and more like a cultural divide inside crypto itself. One side sees regulatory clarity as essential for mainstream adoption, institutional capital, and long-term market stability.
The other side worries that too much integration with traditional finance eventually turns crypto into a watered-down extension of the same system it originally challenged. Hayes clearly falls into that second camp.
And to be fair, his concerns aren’t entirely theoretical. Crypto markets already rely heavily on ETFs, custodians, stablecoin issuers, and centralized exchanges that increasingly resemble traditional financial intermediaries. Critics argue the industry’s anti-establishment roots have already softened considerably over the past few years.
Crypto’s Identity Crisis Is Becoming Harder To Ignore
What makes Hayes’ comments resonate is that they tap into a growing identity crisis surrounding Bitcoin and crypto more broadly. Is crypto supposed to replace pieces of the existing financial system, or simply become another asset class operating inside it?
Those two visions lead to very different futures. One prioritizes decentralization, censorship resistance, and self-custody. The other prioritizes regulatory approval, institutional participation, and seamless integration with global finance.
Right now, the industry seems to be trying to pursue both paths simultaneously, which is creating more tension as legislation like the CLARITY Act moves closer to reality.
Hayes may sound extreme to some people, but his argument is internally consistent. If Bitcoin truly works as intended, then perhaps it shouldn’t need permission structures from governments or banks to validate its existence.
The problem is, institutional adoption and decentralization don’t always move comfortably in the same direction. And crypto is starting to feel that conflict more than ever.











