US Lawmaker Introduces Bill Classifying Stablecoins as Securities

Congress may consider a bill to classify stablecoins – cryptocurrencies whose values are pegged to a fiat currency or other assets – as securities.

- Advertisement -

In a draft bill published Tuesday, Rep. Sylvia Garcia (D-Texas) introduced legislation to the House Financial Services Committee to regulate stablecoins under the Securities Act of 1933, seeking to provide clarity in an area the bill suggests lacks regulatory guidance.

The bill states:

“The market value of such digital asset is determined, in whole or in significant part, directly or indirectly, by reference to the value of a pool or basket of assets, including digital assets, held, designated, or managed by one or more persons.”

The proposed legislation appears to be a response to the Facebook-led Libra cryptocurrency, which the social media giant introduced in June 2019. The cryptocurrency is meant to be a stablecoin pegged to a basket of fiat currencies.

Lawmakers have urged Facebook and its partners not to launch Libra – and indeed, to halt all development entirely – until regulatory questions around the project and its governance can be resolved.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg is scheduled to testify before the committee on Wednesday.

If signed into law, the rule would give the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) jurisdictional authority over all stablecoins and their issuers.

- Advertisement -

The bill’s introduction does not mean it will ever become law: First, it would need to be voted out of committee, passed by the House of Representatives, taken up and passed by the Senate and signed into law by the U.S. President. It is unclear what sort of support the bill has at present.

However, former Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) Chairman Gary Gensler believes Libra already looks like a security, testifying before the Financial Services Committee in July that the project looks similar to an exchange-traded fund, which does fall within the SEC’s purview.

The bill was introduced jointly with another draft bill sponsored by Rep. Michael San Nicolas (D-Guam), which would bar national security exchanges from listing a security by an issuer if the issuer or an executive affiliated with it received compensation in the form of a managed stablecoin.

- Advertisement -

U.S. Congress image via Shutterstock

Source

Previous Articles:

- Advertisement -

Latest

Gold-Backed Cryptocurrencies Surge as Investors Seek Digital Safe Haven

Gold-backed cryptocurrencies like Paxos Gold (PAXG) and Tether Gold (XAUT) have surged over 24% year-to-date to all-time highs above $3,300.While tokenized gold has thrived...

Mantra (OM) token plummets 90% in 24 hours, wipes out $6B market cap

Mantra (OM) token has crashed over 90% in 24 hours, plummeting from $6.3 to under $0.50, wiping out most of its $6 billion market...

Crypto Gaming Tokens Plummet, Vanish from Top 100 as Market Struggles

Gaming tokens have disappeared from the top 100 cryptocurrency rankings by market cap despite having six representatives a year ago.Eve Frontier launched a 10-day...

Trump to impose new semiconductor tariffs on electronics within months

Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick clarified that recent tariff exemptions for consumer electronics are only temporary.New semiconductor-focused tariffs are expected within "a month or two"...

AI Revolution: Emotional Agents Could Solve Web3 User Experience Crisis

AI agents with emotional capabilities could make Web3 tools more accessible by providing personalized guidance to new users.The steep learning curve of Web3 applications...

Must Read

Top 8 Best Anonymous Web Hosting Companies That Accept Crypto

Nowadays, there is plenty of information about people online, and malicious people use them to carry out inappropriate activities. If you want to keep...