Sheila Warren, CEO of the Crypto Council for Innovation, said the Digital Commodities Consumer Protection Act currently being considered by U.S. lawmakers was a “pivotal step” towards achieving regulatory clarity, but recommended changes to determine the role authorities will take on digital assets.
In written testimony for a Wednesday hearing on the bill with the Senate Agriculture Committee, Warren said the proposed legislation needed to better define a “digital commodity” and security rather than leaving the matter to regulatory agencies or U.S. courts. According to the Crypto Council CEO, the Digital Commodities Consumer Protection Act also fell short of clarifying what trading activity was allowed based on that “readily susceptible to manipulation,” making it possible the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, or CFTC, could have its own interpretation in contrast with that of the Securities and Exchange Commission, or SEC.
“The bill leaves it to the agencies and the Courts to determine whether a digital asset, other than Bitcoin and Ether, is a security or not,” said Warren. “To date, this approach has not worked well, with significant implications for consumers, and is why the industry has made numerous calls for proactive regulation, rather than regulation by enforcement.”
Speaking to Cointelegraph, Warren said the bill, if passed, would grant the CFTC broad authority over the crypto spot market. She said that additional legislation and regulatory processes would likely be required to clarify the SEC’s role — a sentiment recently echoed by chair Gary Gensler — adding there was “a very tight window” to pass such laws given the possible change in leadership following the 2022 Midterm Elections.
“We very strongly feel that any crypto legislation should be bipartisan in nature.”
Warren added in her written statement that the CCI supported provisions within the bill aimed at establishing consumer protection standards such as transparency requirements for financial tools and products in the crypto and blockchain space. The legislation also requires a report on underserved communities involved with digital assets.
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