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Analysis: Crypto Bill Delayed in Review, Still Hope for Bipartisan Agreement on Revenue Issues, Tokenized Securities Dispute May Be Resolved
According to crypto journalist Eleanor Terrett, “After the Republican-led House Financial Services Committee halted bill review for nearly 24 hours, industry practitioners, lawmakers, and staff have made preliminary assessments of the incident and subsequent developments, but many remain ‘angry’ about yesterday’s events.
After discussions with several crypto industry figures and staff from the House Financial Services Committee, it is generally believed that there is still room for compromise — if in the next few days, relevant parties (including banking institutions, Coinbase exchange, and Democrats) can reach a consensus on crypto reward rights, the bill is ‘hopeful’ to be removed from suspension.
As for the tokenized securities provisions (i.e., Section 505 of the bill, which includes requirements for the SEC and CFTC to conduct special research and, as appropriate, initiate public comment rulemaking procedures), they currently do not constitute an obstacle for two reasons: First, tokenization issuers now state that the objections previously raised by Coinbase were actually taken out of context; second, some stakeholders, including Brian Armstrong, believe there is reason to think that significant amendments or even complete deletion of this section are now under discussion.
Ethical controversies remain unchanged from yesterday, with reports indicating that negotiations between the White House and the Senate are ongoing. Finally, there is ongoing concern whether the delay in the House Financial Services Committee’s bill review will affect the timetable of the House Agriculture Committee. Insiders say that the order of proceedings between the two committees is actually unimportant; if the House Agriculture Committee can facilitate an agreement supported by both parties, it could instead clear obstacles for the Senate Banking Committee’s related review process.
This scene actually played out last summer in the House: at that time, the Republican-led House Agriculture Committee overwhelmingly approved parts of the ‘Cryptocurrency Regulatory Clarity Act’ with 47 votes in favor and 6 against, which boosted confidence among members of the subsequent House Financial Services Committee to push forward with the bill — although the latter did not garner equal Democratic support.”