Leading Crypto Group Boosts Its Membership Ranks as Lobbying Efforts Grow
As scrutiny around cryptocurrencies and other digital assets continues to ramp up in Washington, the industry is bolstering its lobbying efforts. The Association for Digital Asset Markets is adding nine companies to bring its membership ranks to 25, according to an early look at the announcement provided to Morning Consult.
With the price of cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin and even
Dogecoin soaring, regulators and lawmakers are expected to give the industry
more rulemaking and scrutiny going forward. That’s fueling a lobbying boom in
Washington as the assets, once a quirky novelty of the financial system,
increasingly draw interest from ordinary investors.
The new members of the Association for Digital Asset
Markets, which was founded in 2018,
include cryptocurrency derivatives exchange FTX (which is currently
off-limits to U.S. investors because of regulatory worries) and WisdomTree
Investments Inc., an asset management company that focuses on Exchange Traded
Funds.
The trade group said it has spoken with policymakers in
recent months regarding the future of digital asset policy and has written
several comment letters, including on the Financial Crimes Enforcement
Network’s anti-money laundering rule regarding cryptocurrency.
The expansion of the association’s membership comes after
the introduction of a new group earlier this month, the Crypto Council for
Innovation, which the cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase Global Inc. founded
along with Fidelity Investments and Square Inc.
Cryptocurrency firms are especially interested in lobbying
efforts after new Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Gary Gensler was
sworn in. Gensler, who led the Commodity Futures Trading Commission under
President Barack Obama, taught a class on cryptocurrencies at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology.
While Gensler is known as a Wall Street critic and isn’t
likely to be cryptocurrency’s cheerleader at the SEC, the industry hopes he’ll
embrace rulemaking related to the assets and clear up uncertainties that
lobbyists say have stymied the industry.
“Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies have brought new
thinking to payments and financial inclusion, but they’ve also raised new
issues of investor protection that we still need to attend to,” Gensler said at
his confirmation hearing before the Senate Banking Committee on March 2. “If
confirmed at the SEC, I’d work with fellow commissioners to both promote the
new innovation, but also at the core to ensure investor protection.”
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