Data from Santiment indicates that bullish Bitcoin commentary on social media has climbed to one of its most optimistic points this year, with 1.55 bullish comments for every 1.00 bearish one. Yet, the on-chain data suggests the community may be moving too quickly.
Bitcoin Sentiment Points To Greed After CLARITY Act Vote
The approval of the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act by the Senate Banking Committee shifted both price and crowd sentiment at once. This followed the US Senate Banking Committee’s 15-9 bipartisan vote to advance the CLARITY Act, sending the significant market-structure bill to the full Senate.
Santiment’s data shows that Bitcoin’s social sentiment has again entered a FOMO zone. On May 15, Santiment’s social sentiment ratio for Bitcoin reached 1.55 bullish comments for every 1.00 bearish one, placing it clearly within that FOMO range.
That figure mirrors a previous high recorded on April 25, when the ratio stood at 1.58 bullish-to-bearish. Each time the ratio of positive to negative commentary on social media moves into this FOMO zone, it tends to signal a short-term profit-taking opportunity.
This does not necessarily imply that Bitcoin will decline simply because sentiment has turned optimistic. The same Santiment chart shows that the stronger contrarian setup appeared on April 18, when the bullish-to-bearish ratio dropped to .59. That was deep in the FUD Zone, just before Bitcoin began to rebound.
Bitcoin Ratio Of Positive vs. Negative Commentary. Source: @SantimentData On X
CLARITY Act Still Bullish For Bitcoin In The Long Run
The warning about short-term sentiment does not diminish the long-term significance of the CLARITY Act. The bill seeks to create a clearer federal framework for digital assets, defining the division of authority between the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
BTCUSD currently trading at $78,486. chart: TradingView
The bill received backing from major crypto companies including Coinbase, Circle, and Ripple, each of which has advocated for some form of regulation in the crypto sector. Senior figures from these firms also reacted positively on social media after the Senate Banking Committee advanced the measure.
Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong, for instance, said in a post on X: “looking forward to a bipartisan law that cements the US as the world’s crypto capital. Let’s get CLARITY done.”
The bill must still go before the full Senate, where 60 affirmative votes are required. Projections from SoSoValue indicate a key window between mid-May and early August, with the House recess beginning July 27 and the Senate recess starting August 10.
If lawmakers do not complete full Senate review and reconciliation before that time, the bill could be delayed into the fall agenda, making its passage significantly more challenging.
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