Crypto's U.S. Banking Problem Likely Among the First Things Tackled Under Trump

When inauguration day rolls around in the U.S., the first policy domino to topple could be the industry's banking roadblocks, though the White House may be the wrong place to watch for the most consequential action.

The crypto industry will surely cheer loudly over some of the executive-order fireworks when President-elect Donald Trump is sworn in, which could reportedly include directives on crypto, but such orders can be more smoke than fire. (President Joe Biden, after all, issued a crypto order in 2022 instructing the federal government to get a better handle on crypto .)

While the White House touts its vision for the direction of crypto policy, the concrete steps will be taken at the regulatory agencies, such as the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. These are nominally independent regulators , but they'll have new leadership closely aligned with Trump's view, even if there's a delay in confirming the permanent agency chiefs.

At the SEC, former Commissioner Paul Atkins is on deck to receive his formal nomination to take over. But the conservative SEC veteran may be jammed amid the potential bottleneck of Senate confirmations, where the most urgent appointees, such as the new secretary of the Treasury, will be first in line.

On January 21, the day after the inauguration, the commission will have just three members — two Republicans and a Democrat. Trump will be able to name one of the two sitting Republicans as acting chair, just as Biden had named Allison Herren Lee to that role on January 21, 2021, at the start of his presidency. Both Republican commissioners, Mark Uyeda and Hester Peirce, once served Atkins as his SEC counsels, so they're likely to be on the same page as him, anyway.

Some expect Commissioner Uyeda to get the nod to be acting chair, and there's a change he could immediately make that would have massive ramifications for crypto banking. He's said he favors erasing the controversial Staff Accounting Bulletin No. 121 (SAB 121) that effectively demands banks treat their customers' crypto assets as their own, factoring for the tokens on their balance sheets and taking the resulting hit in the capital they need to expensively maintain. A hypothetical Acting Chair Uyeda could direct that bulletin be withdrawn, taking the enforcement pressures off of the big banks that have had to tread lightly into crypto matters.

Commissioner Peirce also openly opposed SAB 121 from inside the agency, issuing a statement that argued, "the SAB does not acknowledge the Commission’s own role in creating the legal and regulatory risks that justify this accounting treatment." So, if she were to take over, the bulletin could be similarly scrapped.

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