The director of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)âs fintech initiative cautioned against what he called âhasty regulatory pronouncementsâ during a Congressional hearing on Wednesday.
The remarks from Daniel Gorfine, director of LabCFTC, were directed toward members of the U.S. House Committee on Agriculture which, as reported by CoinDesk, sought testimony on the issue of cryptocurrencies and digital assets. Alongside Gorfine were former JPMorgan blockchain lead Amber Baldet, former CFTC chair Gary Gensler and A16Z managing partner Scott Kupor.
Gorfine framed his remarks from the perspective that many different things can be considered âcommoditiesâ â but not all of them would warrant attention from U.S. regulators.
âItâs only when we start to see the rise of futures or swaps products built on those commodities that we have kind of direct oversight,â he remarked, going on to state:
âWe all have the shared goal to bring clarity and certainty to the market but [we] also need to be sure that we are thoughtful in our approach and do not steer or impede the development of this area of innovation. Indeed, while some may seek the immediate establishment of bright lines, the reality is that hasty regulatory pronouncements are likely to miss the mark, have unintended consequences, or fail to capture important nuance regarding the structure of new products or models.â
Gorfine would return to that point several times during the hearing, which began at 10 a.m. local time.
âItâs important that weâre not hasty in figuring out what the contours are of applying securities law and then the commodities framework,â he remarked.
The hearing notably provided a window into what some members of Congress think when it comes to the subject of cryptocurrencies â though it wasnât positive in some cases.
For example, Rep. Collin Peterson remarked that, in his view, much of the cryptocurrency ecosystem âseems like a Ponzi scheme,â asking âwhatâs behind this?â
It was Gensler who offered a response, stating that âthereâs really nothing behind gold either ⦠whatâs behind it is a cultural norm, for thousands of years we liked gold.â
âWe do it as a store of value, so bitcoin is a modern form of digital gold. Itâs a social construct,â he continued.
In other cases, committee members simply wanted more information on how cryptocurrencies exactly work.
âWeâre creating another money supply here as I see it. I just donât know how that works. Our dollar sets the mark for the world. I canât visualize how this would work,â Rep. Rick Allen commented.
But it was Michael Conaway, the chairman of the committee, who perhaps had one of the most notable â and telling â remarks about bitcoin, coming at the very end of the hearing and just days after the U.S. Justice Department claimed it had traced bitcoin transactions conducted by 12 Russian intelligence officers accused of hacks during the 2016 presidential election.
âAs long as the stupid criminals keep using bitcoin, itâll be great,â Conaway quipped.
Want to read CoinDeskâs full by-the-second coverage of the hearing? Follow our stream on Twitter here.Â
Daniel Gorfine image via House Agricultural Committee