Top US Regulators Urge Congress to Pass the Crypto Assets Bill
The
U.S. Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC), a group of the country’s top
financial regulators, has urged Congress to pass the Crypto Assets Bill.
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said, "Crypto-asset activities could pose
risks to U.S. financial stability if their interconnections with the
traditional financial system or their overall scale were to grow without
adherence to or being paired with appropriate regulation, including enforcement
of the existing regulatory structure."
U.S. Financial Stability Oversight Council’s Recommendations
The
U.S. Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC) published its "Report on
Digital Asset Financial Stability Risks and Regulation" on Monday. The
124-page report includes
10 recommendations for the regulation of crypto assets.
The
FSOC, chaired by the Treasury Secretary, is a group of the country’s top
financial regulators. It is made up of 10 voting members and five non-voting
members. The voting members include the Treasury Secretary, the Federal Reserve
Chairman, the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), the Chairman of the Securities
and Exchange Commission (SEC), and the Chairman of the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission (CFTC).
Treasury
Secretary Janet Yellen said at the FSOC meeting on Monday that the report
"identifies several material gaps in current regulation and
recommendations to address these gaps."
The
council recommends that member agencies consider general principles when
dealing with crypto assets, such as "same activity, same risk, same
regulatory outcome" and "technological neutrality." Regulators
should also "continue to enforce existing rules and regulations" and
"coordinate with each other in the supervision of crypto-asset
entities."
Another
recommendation states:
"The
Council recommends that Congress pass legislation that provides for explicit
rule-making authority for federal financial regulators over the spot market for
crypto-assets that are not securities."
The
council also urged Congress to "pass legislation that would create a
comprehensive federal prudential framework for stablecoin issuers that also
addresses the associated market integrity, investor and consumer protection,
and payment system risks."
Council members should "continue to build their capacity to analyze and monitor crypto-asset activities and allocate sufficient
resources to do so." The report further details:
"The
Council also recommends that Congress appropriate necessary resources to member
agencies for the supervision and regulation of crypto-asset activities."
Citing
the FSOC report, Treasury Secretary Yellen said, "Crypto-asset activities could pose risks to
U.S. financial stability if their interconnections with the traditional
financial system or their overall scale were to grow without adherence to or
being paired with appropriate regulation, including enforcement of the existing
regulatory structure."
Federal
Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said at the FSOC meeting, "I support this
report and its recommendations," explaining:
"It
is important to establish a thorough prudential framework to address the risks
of digital assets. Acting now allows us to support responsible innovation while
preserving financial stability."
0 Comments