【Block Rhythm】SIFMA, a major Wall Street lobbying organization, held a critical closed-door meeting with cryptocurrency industry representatives this week. Both sides engaged in heated discussions over several core disagreements in the U.S. cryptocurrency 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 lobby groups are pushing to limit provisions related to yield-bearing dollar stablecoins. The cryptocurrency industry, meanwhile, hopes to use this communication to persuade the other side to lower its demands and protect the bipartisan agreement already reached.
Time is becoming increasingly tight. Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott plans to advance the bill’s review next week. Industry consensus holds that if the bill fails to gain bipartisan support at the committee stage, it will essentially have no hope of proceeding to a full Senate vote. This bill is viewed as an important legislation for reshaping the U.S. cryptocurrency regulatory framework, but the final outcome remains highly uncertain.
Посмотреть Оригинал
На этой странице может содержаться сторонний контент, который предоставляется исключительно в информационных целях (не в качестве заявлений/гарантий) и не должен рассматриваться как поддержка взглядов компании Gate или как финансовый или профессиональный совет. Подробности смотрите в разделе «Отказ от ответственности» .
Последний этап борьбы за регулирование криптовалют в США: лоббистские группы и отраслевые участники
【Block Rhythm】SIFMA, a major Wall Street lobbying organization, held a critical closed-door meeting with cryptocurrency industry representatives this week. Both sides engaged in heated discussions over several core disagreements in the U.S. cryptocurrency 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 lobby groups are pushing to limit provisions related to yield-bearing dollar stablecoins. The cryptocurrency industry, meanwhile, hopes to use this communication to persuade the other side to lower its demands and protect the bipartisan agreement already reached.
Time is becoming increasingly tight. Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott plans to advance the bill’s review next week. Industry consensus holds that if the bill fails to gain bipartisan support at the committee stage, it will essentially have no hope of proceeding to a full Senate vote. This bill is viewed as an important legislation for reshaping the U.S. cryptocurrency regulatory framework, but the final outcome remains highly uncertain.