The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), two of the most potent financial authorities in the US, have signed a new memorandum of understanding to enhance collaboration in the regulation of financial markets, including cryptocurrencies.
The goal of the agreement is to lessen the two agencies’ long-standing “regulatory turf wars” and establish a more cohesive strategy for overseeing markets that increasingly overlap across asset classes.
Rapid technological advancements, including blockchain systems, automated trading algorithms and digital infrastructure, have blurred conventional jurisdictional boundaries between securities and derivatives markets, according to a joint statement of both the authorities.
The memorandum describes how the agencies will coordinate enforcement activities, exchange data, and create technology-neutral policies that will provide businesses in the cryptocurrency and other new sectors more certainty.
According to SEC Chair Paul Atkins, the deal is a significant step toward strengthening collaboration between the two organisations. For many years, competing regulations and overlapping regulatory frameworks have caused uncertainty for market players and occasionally driven innovation to non-US nations.
To ensure that oversight keeps up with the quickly advancing financial technology, the authorities also stressed the necessity of creating a “fit-for-purpose regulatory framework” for cryptocurrency assets.
Recently, both organisations have increased their efforts to promote innovation while upholding the integrity of the market. Creating task forces and advisory groups devoted to cutting-edge technology like blockchain and artificial intelligence is one way to do this.
The memorandum also presents the idea of a “minimum effective dose” regulatory approach, which means that authorities want to implement the least amount of intrusive control required to preserve stability while promoting innovation.
Closer collaboration between the SEC and CFTC, according to officials, could lessen regulatory ambiguity and give businesses running trading platforms, clearinghouses, investment vehicles, and other services related to digital assets clearer direction.
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