The chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission on Thursday made a plea for more rules governing the crypto industry, as lawmakers are probing what went wrong at the crypto exchange FTX.
“If we are going to ensure that FTX and the other firms that are subjecting customers to billions in losses are appropriately regulated and held accountable, we need to act promptly to apply a comprehensive regulatory regime,” CFTC Chairman Rostin Behnam said in testimony prepared for delivery to a Senate Agriculture Committee hearing.
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The agriculture committee’s chairwoman, Sen. Debbie Stabenow, has authored legislation that would give the CFTC regulatory power over the crypto industry.
The hearing “will be crucial to assessing the future of this legislation and whether it still has the similar, strong bipartisan support it did prior to the recent crisis,” Beacon Policy Advisors wrote in a note on Monday.
With crypto largely unregulated, there’s fierce debate in Washington about which agency should oversee the industry. Some consumer advocates, as the Washington Post noted earlier this week, say the CFTC is too lenient and less prepared than the Securities and Exchange Commission to police digital currencies. The SEC’s chairman, Gary Gensler, has called the Stabenow bill “too light touch.”
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Stabenow, a Michigan Democrat, defended her bill at the hearing, saying it was “designed to prevent” situations like the FTX blowup. Sen. John Boozman, an Arkansas Republican who co-sponsored the measure, said he remains committed to advancing it and that the CFTC is the “right agency” to regulate digital commodities.
Today’s hearing is one of at least two scheduled on the FTX debacle. On Dec. 13, the House Financial Services Committee is planning its own hearing on the FTX collapse’s consequences for digital assets.
FTX’s bankruptcy has hit an already battered crypto market, sending bitcoin BTCUSD, -0.86% prices to a two-year low.
In addition to FTX, a number of major players in crypto have collapsed this year, including blockchain Terra, hedge fund Three Arrows, broker lender Celsius, and most recently BlockFi. Earlier this year, FTX extended a $ 400 million credit facility to BlockFi, with an option to acquire the digital-asset lender for $ 240 million.
Frances Yue contributed to this article.