The proposed legislation aims to resolve the persistent regulatory turf war between the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. By establishing clear statutory definitions, the bill would categorize digital tokens as either securities or commodities, effectively ending the current era of enforcement-driven oversight. Under these terms, the SEC would retain authority over investment contract assets, while the CFTC would assume expanded jurisdiction over digital commodity spot markets and exchange operations.
Beyond institutional roles, the bill mandates strict protocols for trading platforms and brokers, specifically requiring the separation of customer assets from corporate funds to prevent liquidity crises. To bolster enforcement, the act earmarks $150 million for investigating crypto fraud and subjects digital asset firms to Bank Secrecy Act reporting standards. Despite this framework, the bill faces lingering opposition regarding its impact on decentralized finance and stablecoin yield products. If the Senate fails to act this month, the path to enactment could stall until 2027, leaving industry participants in a state of legislative limbo as they await the final version of the text.
Comments (0)
No comments yet. Be the first!