AUTERUM
- The White House and the Congress have exposed a multitude of ambitious changes for the digital asset industry.
- The Stablecoins lead a wave of invoice writing.
- Some market experts have underlined a surprising ally in the thrust of new laws.
A version of this story appeared in our AUTERUM Newsletter on February 7. Register here.
After months of increasing expectations concerning major changes in cryptography policy, the Trump administration has established certain markers this week.
On Tuesday, David Sacks, principal advisor to President Donald Trump on AI and Crypto, promised to issue “regulatory clarity” for a long time by industry leaders such as CEO of Coinbase, Brian Armstrong.
Flanked by senator Tim Scott, the powerful president of the senatorial banking committee and other main republican legislators, said that it was the time to establish “road rules” for industry, Aleks Gilbert reported.
As of which, exactly, Sacks is, Andrew Flanagan wrote a profile of the chief of chief of Paypal and venture capital.
It turns out that the bags, with 1.2 million subscribers, have been an influential voice in the rhythm of the Silicon Valley on the right in recent years.
Meanwhile, Hester Peirce, commissioner of the Securities and Exchange Commission, has set the tone for the changes to come now that the repression pursued by former president Gary Gensler is over.
Peirce said that investors making the Bitcoin step and that his fellow men should accept the risks of the market and not cry out for the “maman government” for bailout if they lose their shirts, Ben Weiss reported.
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Debanking obtains an audience
There was also an action on Capitol Hill.
On Thursday, the Scott banking committee held the first hearings on the so -called “debanrenches” of cryptographic companies and individuals. The problem has become a rallying cry for Marc Andreessen, the billionaire VC de la Silicon Valley and the co -founder of Kraken Jesse Powell.
Coinbase submitted a letter calling for an alleged “untenable” move, Andrew reported. The house plans to hold its own audience on the issue.
On Tuesday, Senator Bill Hagerty, a republican of Tennessee, presented legislation designed to establish rules for stablecoin issuers in the United States.
In addition, the bill could also be a boost for the tokénization because active active world such as the actions and obligations placed on the chain would work similarly to the stablecoins, Liam Kelly reported.
Frightened democrats
The hopes of the industry are raised for the bill, it will necessarily become a test for the Republicans. But they will receive the help of a surprising source – the Democrats.
It was the capture of Anthony Scaramucci at a cryptography conference in London on Monday. He said the Congress would adopt Crypto bills by November, or March 2026 at the latest.
For what? Because the Democrats were burned in the 2024 elections by campaign expenditure in the cryptographic industry.
“Democrats are frightened by their mind by cryptographic political action committees,” said Scaramucci during a round table on the digital assets forum. “There is no reason for them to go hard on this industry.”
Edward Robinson is the history publisher for DL News. Contact the author to ed@dlnews.com.