- The President of the SEC, Paul Atkins, is committed to creating clear and adjusted cryptography rules.
- Hester Peirce said that cryptographic companies are faced with a clear “lava pit”.
- The round table signals a softer position after years of aggressive application.
There is a new sheriff in town and is done directly at business.
The new president of the SEC, Paul Atkins, is committed to clarifying the regulations of the cryptocurrency during the last round table on Friday, criticizing past efforts and promising a “form-form” framework for digital assets.
“I expect enormous advantages of this innovation on the market in terms of efficiency, cost reduction, transparency and risk attenuation,” said Atkins. “Innovation, unfortunately, has been suffocated for several years due to the uncertainty of the market and the regulations that the SEC has favored.”
Atkins, sworn in barely a few days ago after being appointed by President Donald Trump, said he was looking forward to working with the Congress and administration officials to develop a rational framework for cryptographic assets.
His comments follow a series of dry movements to soften his position on the industry, including the advice on how cryptographic companies should manage titles disclosure and the rejection of several high -level cases.
Commissioner Hester Peirce also weighed at the round table, using a living metaphor to describe the previous approach of the agency in terms of cryptography guard rules.
She compared navigation on the dry regulations to the game “the soil is wasa” – but in the dark, without clear guidance.
“If investment advisers do not know what cryptographic assets are titles or which entities are qualified guards, they may not be able to serve the best of their customers,” said Peirce. “We have to turn on the lights and build a few aisles on the lava pit.”
Peirce, who now directs the internal working group of the Crypto de la SEC, has described a series of questions for regulators and industry participants, especially if the rules should be updated to allow self-cuire and settlement systems based on smart contracts.
The round table signals the continuous pressure from dry to the recalibration of its approach to digital assets after years of increased control under former president Gary Gensler – a change hosted by many of the industry, because the agency traces a new course under the direction of the Trump era.
Cryptography market movers
- Bitcoin lost 0.4% in the last 24 hours and is negotiated at $ 94,230.
- Ethereum is down 1% in the same period at $ 1,810.
What we read
Kyle Baird is the editor of the DL News weekend. Do you have a tip? Email to kbaird@dlnews.com.