An omnibus bill aimed at comprehensive reform of U.S. cryptocurrency regulation was introduced Monday by Rep. Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.). It is thought to have little chance of passage at present but, according to lawyers and backers in the industry, it does provide insight into what a top-to-bottom new law governing crypto could look like one day.
Marshall Hayner of Metal Pay and Erik Finman, who became a millionaire from bitcoin (BTC) before the age of 18 and now runs an investment fund, contributed to the discussion draft.
Presented on March 9, the âCrypto-currency Act of 2020â sets out to define categories of digital assets and clarify which federal agency will oversee each tranche.Â
âThe bill looks to provide not only clarity but legitimacy to crypto assets in the United States,â said Will Stechschulte, Gosarâs legislative assistant, in a press phone call.Â
See also: âYoungest Bitcoin Millionaireâ Willing to Stake it All on Metal Pay
Regulatory uncertainty hangs like a cloud over the industry as it aims to attract conventional investors. Fully 56 percent of financial advisers cite âregulatory concernsâ as reason not to invest in the nascent industry, a recent Bitwise survey found.
âRegulatory uncertainty has certainly been a shackle around the ankle of U.S. investors,â Mati Greenspan, founder of Quantum Economics and a former eToro analyst, said. âMany projects are simply choosing to move elsewhere.âÂ
While there are existing proposals aimed at providing clear guidance â such as the Token Taxonomy Act and Securities and Exchange Commission member Hester Peirceâs âSafe Harborâ proposal â Gosarâs bill is the latest to take a holistic approach to crypto regulation. Â
âItâs difficult for a member to move a bill in a committee of which heâs not a member, doubly so if heâs in the minority,â Brito wrote in a blog post.
The bill divides digital assets into three categories: crypto-commodity, crypto-currency and crypto-security with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), the Secretary of the Treasury via the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) overseeing each, respectively.Â
âWhile the bill makes sense on the surface,â a deeper look reveals that its neat categorizations are potentially fatal flaws, said Lawson Baker, head of operations and general counsel at TokenSoft. A Bloomberg legal analyst said much the same, claiming an early draft of the bill âdisplays a lack of basic understanding of the relevant federal laws and regulatory agencies.â
Debate over the billâs efficacy and overreach started in mid-December, when a draft version leaked. Jerry Brito, executive director of Coin Center, directed criticism at the billâs sponsor, Rep. Gosar, who does not sit on the committees that might discuss his bill.Â
âItâs difficult for a member to move a bill in a committee of which heâs not a member, doubly so if heâs in the minority,â Brito wrote in a blog post. He now says the bill should be opposed on principle, if it shows any signs of life.
âItâs dead on arrival,â Kristin Smith of the Blockchain Association, said after reviewing the latest version.Â
Following its introduction on the floor late Monday afternoon, Ben Goldey, Gosarâs representative, said the bill will now pass to a committee for review. âUsually within the first week it will get assigned, but I suspect Financial Services [Committee,]â will take it up, Goldey said. Finman suggested it may be reviewed first by the House Committee on Agriculture.
Whether the bill passes or not, its sweeping ambition is already redefining the scope of crypto regulation. Attempting to simplify the issues around cryptocurrency and its relationship to the larger economy, the bill is an example of why itâs so hard to define what crypto is and how it should be treated.Â
CoinDesk spoke with lawyers, investors and the billâs writers about how the bill takes on cryptoâs big regulatory issues and likely goes too far.
Gosarâs bill defines crypto-commodities as an âeconomic good or service, including derivatives that have full or substantial fungibility; the markets treat with no regard as to who produced [them;] and rest on a blockchain or decentralized cryptographical ledger.âÂ
This broadly defined concept would include bitcoin, ethereum, and any digital asset with free-floating valuations. The bill would also place these commodities under the purview of the CFTC. However, as Robert Kim, a Bloomberg legal analyst noted: the CFTC does not regulate commodities themselves, but derivatives traded off them.Â
âThe CFTC indicated early on that virtual currencies, such as bitcoin are commodities under the Commodity Exchange Act. However, that does not mean they regulate the day-to-day activity of spot exchanges,â said Donna Redel, board member of New York Angels and a professor at Fordham Law and Fordham Gabelli School, said. âDo they have the capacity to review that? The regulators themselves would have to see whatâs feasible here.â
See also: Lawmakers Reintroduce Bill to Exempt Crypto Tokens From US Securities Laws
Similarly, FinCEN was selected to oversee âcrypto-currencies,â despite not actually regulating currency. Marshall Hayner of Metal Pay thinks thatâs a pedantic statement.Â
âWhen you launch a crypto product and deal with stablecoins, youâre dealing with FinCEN,â he said in a phone call. âAnti-money laundering requirements are top of mind for any firm that wants to remain compliant.âÂ
Lawson Baker, head of operations and general counsel at TokenSoft, a technology company automating finance by porting financial assets onto blockchains, noted that the definition given to âcrypto-securitiesâ by the bill does not capture real-world use cases of blockchain technology.Â
The proposed definition: âall debt and equity that rest on a blockchain or decentralized cryptographic ledger,â makes sense in some contexts, Baker said, but in reference to traditional assets misses the mark.Â
For example, thereâs mortgage debt that could be issued on a blockchain. âUnder [the billâs] rules, a tokenized mortgage would be a âcrypto-securityâ requiring registration with the SEC absent an offering exemption,â Baker said. âAs we all know, mortgages are already regulated by state and federal banking laws and not the SEC.âÂ
My gut says we should stay nimble right now and define later. Read: push regulators to provide rule updates or additional guidance.
Likewise, Redel pointed out that even broad definitions may not allow projects room to breathe. She pointed instead to Hester Peirceâs proposal for a safe harbor for token projects, which grants three years exemption for projects to decentralize.Â
âThe digital asset industry is constantly evolving,â Redel said. âAny effort of legislation has to take into account future innovation in the space and what else happens in the coming years. Itâs not good to bet on a horse race if you donât know the players.â
Under the Act, a âdecentralized cryptographic ledgerâ refers to a âledger that (A) runs as a stand-alone blockchain that is secured through a minting mechanism.â As Baker notes, âThis definition presumes all cryptocurrencies will operate on blockchains and public ledgers, completely ignoring how privacy coins like Zcash will operate in the future.âÂ
Mati Greenspan takes a realistic view. While clearer frameworks may bring in entrepreneurs, investors and traditional financiers standing on the sideline of crypto, decisions to invest are also impacted by the larger mechanizations of the economy.Â
âSentiment is way down due to the effects of the [Corona] virus and most people arenât exactly in an investing mood lately,â Greenspan said.Â
Likewise, Nic Carter, a venture capitalist with Castle Island Ventures, said crypto is âan asset class thatâs really just an outlet for gambling.â Adding, these âexcesses of crypto [are] definitely a function of our stage in the economic cycle.âÂ
Carter adds that clear guidance for tax liabilities are also necessary, which the bill fails to address.
What good is an omnibus bill if it cannot pass? What about more focused approaches for that matter?
The Token Taxonomy Act was successfully introduced, but was ultimately stalled during the review period. While Erik Finman is confident that his bill will pass, âIâm not even considering failure as an option,â he said, a similar situation is likely to transpire here.Â
âThe optimum way to regulate the industry would be for the agencies to come up with a robust set of rules,â Donna Redel said. âThis is preferable than the slower process of adjudicating and then waiting for the agencies to catch up. But the courts will, hopefully, always be there to provide guidance.â
While this process is slow, and companies may lose time and competition, Redel is skeptical that any prescriptive law could cover all the facets of the industry.Â
Josh Lawler, a partner at Zuber Lawler, agreed. âLooking at various statutory schemes, most donât work. The Swiss system doesnât work, really. Some are better than others, but itâs not that easy to get a comprehensive plan.â
âMy gut says we should stay nimble right now and define later. Read: push regulators to provide rule updates or additional guidance under current definitions rather than unintentionally redefine the scope of an agencyâs regulatory jurisdiction,â Lawson Baker said.