American regulators would explore new ways of coordinating cryptographic surveillance, with discussions to restore an advisory committee.
The American Commission for Securities and the Exchange and the Committee Futures Trading Commission would try to understand how to work together on cryptographic regulations. In an article of February 13 on X, the journalist of Fox News, Eleanor Terrett, wrote, citing sources close to the question, that the two agencies may plan to relaunch a joint advisory committee which has been inactive for more than a decade.
The CFTC-SEC advisory committee on emerging regulatory problems was created in 2010 to help the two agencies stay on the same wavelength. It came out of a 2009 report which aimed to improve coordination after the 2008 financial crisis showed gaps in regulatory supervision.
The committee was aimed at identifying risks, assessing their impact and ensuring that the two agencies were aligned. But it stopped in 2014 due to leadership changes and a change of priorities and has not been brought back since.
Terrett stressed that the acting president of the CFTC, Caroline Pham, called to bring it back in 2024, claiming that the spouse panel would be a “strong signal of a new American regulatory approach which is collaborative and cooperative”. Neither the dry nor the CFTC have made public comments on the issue since the news broke out.
Discussions on the joint committee are surfaced while the new AI and the cryptographic tsar of President Donald Trump and the Crypto David Sacks described the plans to work with the Congress on the market structure, signaling a push for regulations lighter cryptographic.
Crypto expectations under Trump have looked at clear rules. The official calendar of the presidential working group on digital asset markets also signals acid intentions to accelerate the regulation of cryptography. The calendar requires that the American Treasury, the Ministry of Justice, the SEC and other agencies concerned identify all the relevant laws for cryptocurrencies and digital assets by the end of February.
Earlier in February, the SEC Commissioner, Hester Peirce, defended his approach to the regulation of cryptocurrencies, by prioritizing an approach adapted to innovation, rather than restrictive monitoring. She also clarified that she was not “a defender of the industry”, but more a “maximalist freedom”, pushing the claims that she supports the crypto too much.