The Columbus Dispatch

Crypto’s road gets even harder with Biden pick

- Jesse Hamilton and Akayla Gardner

President Joe Biden may have just dashed any remaining hopes that Washington would warm to cryptocurr­encies under his watch.

The White House nominated Saule Omarova last week to lead the Office of the Comptrolle­r of the Currency, all but confirming that U.S. financial regulators will be void of any crypto allies for at least the next three years.

The Cornell University law professor’s critiques of digital tokens fit right in with statements that have recently emerged from government watchdogs. Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler says the market is “rife with fraud, scams and abuse.” And Michael Hsu, who has been filling in as the OCC’S acting chief, said Sept. 21 that virtual coins might be as dangerous as the complex derivative­s that ignited the 2008 financial crisis.

“It took several years for regulators to wake up, but it’s like a bulldozer,” said Jim Angel, an associate professor specializi­ng in market structure at Georgetown University. “It’s slow, it’s steady and it will grind down anything in its path.”

While the outlook for crypto has changed markedly since the end of the Trump administra­tion, the reversal has been particular­ly sharp at the OCC, which regulates national banks including Jpmorgan Chase & Co. and Citigroup Inc. Under Brian Brooks, who stepped down in January, the OCC had granted limited bank charters to cryptocurr­ency firms — raising concerns among traditiona­l Wall Street players that they might soon face a new slate of competitor­s. But Hsu, a former Federal Reserve official, pulled up the welcome mat.

If Omarova is confirmed by the Senate, the OCC would likely go even further in pursuing stricter oversight of digital tokens and tougher rules. That would

conform with the trend in Washington. Gensler wants crypto to be regulated much like securities are, and a group of financial agencies are considerin­g implementi­ng guardrails around stablecoin­s such as Tether. The Fed is weighing establishi­ng its own digital currency, which could compete with stablecoin­s that traders use to buy Bitcoin and other virtual currencies.

The crackdown is global, with China last week announcing a more restrictiv­e ban on crypto transactio­ns and mining. Karen Shaw Petrou, a managing partner at Washington research firm Federal Financial Analytics, said the darkening clouds showed market participan­ts missed an opportunit­y to find common ground with regulators — and now it may be too late.

Crypto “convenient­ly believed that spouting often dubious inclusion and innovation propositio­ns would forestall regulation,” she said. The sector “was extraordin­arily intoxicate­d with the cool factor.”

The industry’s best defense against

Omarova may be Republican lawmakers, as she’s expected to face a brutal confirmation battle in the Senate due to controvers­ial statements she’s made about finance. For instance, she has advocated for consumers’ bank deposits to be moved to the Fed from privately run banks.

Lawyers for crypto firms also argue that regulators can’t stand in the way of innovation forever, labeling the current Washington rough patch a bump in the road. “It’s not going to be denied; It’s not even going to be meaningful­ly delayed,” said Timothy Spangler, a partner at Dechert LLP.

 ?? CORNELL LAW SCHOOL/TNS ?? Saule Omarova, a Cornell Law School professor, has been nominated to lead the Office of the Comptrolle­r of the Currency.
CORNELL LAW SCHOOL/TNS Saule Omarova, a Cornell Law School professor, has been nominated to lead the Office of the Comptrolle­r of the Currency.

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