If there were ever such a thing as an all-star lineup of regulators, the United States House of Representatives Agricultural Committee’s June 6 hearing on digital asset regulation would probably hold the record. The current chair of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) Rostin Behnam was joined by a former chair and a former acting chair of that agency, as well as a former commissioner. Coinbase chief legal officer Paul Grewal also appeared.
It was also very long hearing, with Behnam alone speaking and answering questions for over two hours. The topic of the hearing was the draft bill authored by committee chair Glenn Thompson and House Financial Services Committee chair Patrick McHenry.
“It is our hope that we will have a bipartisan, joint committee legislative proposal,” Thompson said of the Republicans’ bill in his opening remarks.
Democratic committee members showed some signs of balking at this hope. The 162-page bill was described as “incredibly complex,” and they only got to see it last week, the Democrats pointed out.
The bill is only a draft, Thompson emphasized, but it is badly needed, as:
The bill should not impact existing law, Behnam told the committee, and it does not shift existing authorities. Rather it covers gaps, especially the spot market for digital assets that are not securities. That gap leads to “Joe Shmo at a vape shop selling cryptocurrency,” as committee member Rick Crawford described in his hometown. Meanwhile, bankers are avoiding the emerging asset class while it remains unregulated.
Related: Binance lawsuit: 61 cryptocurrencies are now seen as securities by the SEC
The Thompson-McHenry bill would change the method of defining securities and commodities to one based on how the
Read more on cointelegraph.com