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Crypto implosion hastens push to clamp down

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WASHINGTON: As a popular digital currency crumbled this month, two unlikely allies in the United States Senate stepped up their campaign to bring regulation to the US$1.3 trillion (RM5.7 trillion) crypto market.

Cynthia Lummis, a conservati­ve Republican from a Wyoming ranching family and Kirsten Gillibrand, a moderate Democrat from Albany, New York, aren’t supposed to get along – let alone work together.

But with Washington riven by deep partisan division, they have bonded over one thing: crypto needing new rules.

The duo are planning to release a draft of their proposal as soon as next week that aims to prevent crises like the recent blowup of the Terrausd stablecoin and settle some of the bureaucrat­ic turf battles that have hobbled oversight.

It’s a congressio­nal election year in America, so it’s hard to say that a bill will become law, but their plan is already garnering a lot of attention.

Lummis, an enthusiast who first bought bitcoin in 2013 at the urging of her son-in-law, isn’t the obvious choice to lead a clampdown.

But, in a recent interview from her office in the US Capitol complex, she laid out a case for bringing clarity to an industry that’s grown to levels of once unimaginab­le complexity and risk.

She described her partnershi­p with Gillibrand, a securities lawyer by trade, as crucial to that effort.

“Her enthusiasm and passion for it – plus the fact that, being a New Yorker, she’s from such a significan­t and important financial centre – made her, like, the perfect partner,” said Lummis, 67.

Washington’s efforts to oversee digital assets date back to the Obama administra­tion but remain scatter-shot, rife with holes and overlappin­g jurisdicti­ons.

Calls for a legislativ­e fix grew louder this month in the wake of the spectacula­r crash of Terrausd, also called UST.

The collapse of the algorithmi­c stablecoin triggered a week-long sell-off that slashed the value of the overall cryptocurr­ency market by hundreds of billions of dollars.

“All the ups and downs of the market have confirmed why our regulatory framework is best,” Gillibrand, 55, said of the bill, seated in her private Capitol Hill “hideaway” office, a few steps away from the Senate floor. “Actually, it emphasised the importance of getting this done now.”

Some details remain in flux, but at a high level the senators’ plan would give the Commodity Futures Trading Commission significan­tly more power than it currently has.

The regulator would directly oversee trading in tokens that meet the definition of a commodity, such as bitcoin, the world’s largest cryptocurr­ency.

Currently its jurisdicti­on is mainly tied to derivative­s.

Meanwhile, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) would police coins that are used to raise money from the public like a stock offering would.

It’s unclear whether those turf lines will satisfy some crypto diehards who want to free the asset class from the reach of the SEC’S onerous investor protection­s.

Their plan would also significan­tly increase oversight of tokens like UST, which currently exist in a regulatory grey area.

The bill would require stablecoin­s, regardless of their setup, to keep 100% reserves on hand and maintain a one-to-one peg with those assets, according to Gillibrand’s office.

Stablecoin­s would be primarily overseen by banking regulators.

An advisory body would also be arranged to study and make recommenda­tions for regulating future developmen­ts in the crypto market.

The legislatio­n would also exempt people from having to report and pay taxes when they make purchases using cryptocurr­ency if their resulting capital gains are US$600 (RM2,633) or less.

Some argue that would make it more attractive to actually use digital currencies to pay at a checkout counter.

 ?? — AFP ?? Increased oversight: A cryptocurr­ency ATM is seen in a convenienc­e store in Miami, Florida. Calls for a legislativ­e fix have grown louder in the United States in the wake of the spectacula­r crash of Terrausd.
— AFP Increased oversight: A cryptocurr­ency ATM is seen in a convenienc­e store in Miami, Florida. Calls for a legislativ­e fix have grown louder in the United States in the wake of the spectacula­r crash of Terrausd.

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