【Blockchain Rhythm】A principal lobbying organization on Wall Street, SIFMA, and representatives from the crypto industry held a crucial closed-door communication meeting this week. Both sides engaged in heated discussions around several core disagreements in the US crypto market structure legislation, with certain progress made on DeFi-related provisions.
The focal issues can be summarized into two points: first, SIFMA opposes granting regulatory exemptions to certain DeFi protocols and developers; second, banking lobbying groups are pushing to limit provisions related to yield-bearing US dollar stablecoins. Meanwhile, the crypto industry hopes to use this communication to lower the other side’s demands and protect the bipartisan consensus that has been reached.
Time is becoming increasingly tight. Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott plans to advance the review of this bill next week. Industry consensus is that if the bill cannot secure bipartisan support at the committee stage, it will essentially have no hope of entering a full Senate vote. This bill is viewed as an important legislation for reshaping the US crypto regulatory framework, but the final outcome remains highly uncertain.
Ver original
Esta página pode conter conteúdo de terceiros, que é fornecido apenas para fins informativos (não para representações/garantias) e não deve ser considerada como um endosso de suas opiniões pela Gate nem como aconselhamento financeiro ou profissional. Consulte a Isenção de responsabilidade para obter detalhes.
Período final do projeto de lei de regulamentação de criptomoedas nos EUA: última batalha entre grupos de lobby e setor
【Blockchain Rhythm】A principal lobbying organization on Wall Street, SIFMA, and representatives from the crypto industry held a crucial closed-door communication meeting this week. Both sides engaged in heated discussions around several core disagreements in the US crypto market structure legislation, with certain progress made on DeFi-related provisions.
The focal issues can be summarized into two points: first, SIFMA opposes granting regulatory exemptions to certain DeFi protocols and developers; second, banking lobbying groups are pushing to limit provisions related to yield-bearing US dollar stablecoins. Meanwhile, the crypto industry hopes to use this communication to lower the other side’s demands and protect the bipartisan consensus that has been reached.
Time is becoming increasingly tight. Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott plans to advance the review of this bill next week. Industry consensus is that if the bill cannot secure bipartisan support at the committee stage, it will essentially have no hope of entering a full Senate vote. This bill is viewed as an important legislation for reshaping the US crypto regulatory framework, but the final outcome remains highly uncertain.