SEC 的 Gensler 暗示退出,为加密货币战争辩护,因“政府严重越权”而被 18 个州起诉 SEC's Gensler Hints At Quitting, Defends Crypto War, Sued By 18 States For "Gross Gov't Overreach"

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/crypto/secs-gensler-hints-quitting-defends-crypto-war-sued-18-states-gross-govt-overreach

SEC 主席 Gary Gensler 强调了对加密资产进行适当注册和披露的必要性,并强调了 SEC 对比特币 ETF 和期货投资的批准。 尽管当选总统特朗普可能面临免职威胁,但金斯勒对 SEC 工作人员表示感谢,并暗示可能会离职。 与此同时,美国 18 个州已对 SEC 和 Gensler 提起诉讼,声称加密行业监管过度。 区块链协会估计,由于缺乏明确的数字资产政策,加密货币公司已花费 4.26 亿美元来对抗 SEC 的行动。

SEC Chair Gary Gensler emphasized the need for proper registration and disclosure for crypto assets and highlighted the SEC's approvals of Bitcoin ETFs and futures investments. Despite the potential threat of removal by President-elect Trump, Gensler expressed gratitude for the SEC staff and hinted at a possible departure. Meanwhile, 18 US states have filed a lawsuit against the SEC and Gensler, claiming overreach in regulating the crypto industry. The Blockchain Association estimates that crypto firms have spent $426 million fighting the SEC's actions due to a lack of clear digital asset policies.


SEC's Gensler Hints At Quitting, Defends Crypto War, Sued By 18 States For "Gross Gov't Overreach"

It was a busy day for SEC Chair Gary Gensler...

With bitcoin smashing to new record highs after Trump's trifecta victory, Gensler - potentially only weeks away from being removed from office - appeared to double-down on his position on (predominantly negative) crypto policy and enforcement.

As CoinTelegraph's Turner Wright reports, in prepared remarks for a Nov. 14 speech at the Practicing Law Institute’s 56th Annual Institute on Securities Regulation, Gensler said his focus for digital assets while leading the commission was having parties “register and give proper disclosure to the public” for roughly 10,000 tokens considered securities.

He also pointed to the SEC’s record of approving spot Bitcoin BTC$88,160 exchange-traded funds and BTC futures investment vehicles under his watch but suggested that some crypto firms had not followed “common-sense rules of the road.”

“This is a field in which over the years there has been significant investor harm,” said Gensler.

“Further, aside from speculative investing and possible use for illicit activities, the vast majority of crypto assets have yet to prove out sustainable use cases.

Everything we’ve done is focused on ensuring compliance with our laws.”

Though the SEC chair’s term ends in June 2026, Trump promised crypto users that he intended to fire Gensler “on day one” if elected, marking a potentially different direction the commission could take on crypto enforcement.

Experts have suggested that the president-elect could not remove Gensler without cause, nor has the SEC chair suggested he would resign.

It’s unclear if Trump has the authority to remove Gensler from the SEC. Any replacement would require Senate approval, but the Republican suggested he would attempt to bypass the chamber by making recess appointments for all of his cabinet and staff. At the time of publication, Trump had not announced any potential replacement for Gensler.

But, at the end of the prepared remarks, Gensler dropped a statement that sounded a lot like a 'so long and thanks for all the fish' comment:

Remarkable SEC Staff

Before I close, I want to say something about the SEC and its staff. It’s a remarkable agency. The staff and Commission are deeply mission- driven, focused on protecting investors, maintaining fair, orderly, and efficient markets, and facilitating capital formation.

The lawyers, accountants, economists, policy experts, and other staff generally could make more money working somewhere else. They choose, though, to work on behalf of the public here at the SEC.

It’s been a great honor to serve with them, doing the people’s work, and ensuring that our capital markets remain the best in the world.

Conclusion

Sam and Jane Gensler, my mom and dad, never worked in finance or even completed college. When they invested their savings, our family benefited from the securities markets’ common-sense rules of the road.

The SEC’s effective administration of well-regulated securities markets promotes trust. It’s what brings investors and issuers to the market like fans to a football game. It’s what underpins the world’s largest capital markets. It’s what has contributed to our nation’s great economic success these last 90 years.

I’ve been proud to serve with my colleagues at the SEC who, day in and day out, work to protect American families on the highways of finance.

But things then went a little bit turbo for Liz Warren's enforcer as CoinTelegraph's Vince Quill reports that 18 US states have filed a lawsuit against the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and Chairman Gary Gensler, accusing the financial regulator of “gross government overreach” against the nascent crypto industry.

The plaintiffs include Nebraska, Tennessee, Wyoming, Kentucky, West Virginia, Iowa, Texas, Mississippi, Ohio, Montana, and others.

The legal complaint reads:

"The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has not respected this allocation of authority.

Instead, without Congressional authorization, the SEC has sought to unilaterally wrest regulatory authority away from the States through an ongoing series of enforcement actions."

According to the Blockchain Association, the Securities and Exchange Commission's various legal actions against the crypto industry cost crypto firms a collective $426 million bill to fight against the regulatory agency's enforcement actions and lack of clarity on a coherent digital asset policy.

Buh-bye, Gary!

Tyler Durden Thu, 11/14/2024 - 17:00
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