Regulators like the Securities and Exchange Commission shouldnât be acting as gatekeepers to new technologies like bitcoin, according to Commissioner Hester Peirce.
Peirceâs remarks, made during an interview with CoinDesk, follow the agencyâs decision to confirm the 2017 rejection of a bitcoin-tied exchange-traded fund backed by Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, which reinforced the argument made in a publicly-issued dissent published alongside last weekâs announcement.
According to Peirce â who was sworn into office this past January and previously served as a staffer in the U.S Senate â the decision actually does a disservice to investors who are operating in the market.
âFrom my perspective, we need to be mindful of what our role is, and itâs not to be the ones who decide which innovations and which technologies get through and which ones donât,â Peirce told CoinDesk.
She added:
âI think thatâs a very dangerous position to put ourselves in, and I think it really does harm investors because it denies them opportunity.â
Perhaps unintentionally, Peirceâs dissent made her a kind of hero in the eyes of the crypto community, netting comparisons to the effect comments made by Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) chief J. Christopher Giancarlo had on his own social media following earlier this year.
In the days following what were perceived as his positive remarks about the technology, Giancarlo was quickly dubbed âCrypto Dad,â a nickname thatâs now been extended to Peirce, who some have sought to label the âCrypto Momâ of seemingly supportive U.S. regulators.
But according to Peirce, her statement on Friday wasnât intended as a remark in support of bitcoin; rather itâs in defense of new technologies and the people who invest time and resources in developing them.
âIâm not taking a view whether bitcoin is going to succeed or fail. Iâm excited by the fact that people are thinking of new ways to do things,â Peirce told CoinDesk. âBitcoin is one of those things, blockchain is one of those things, other cryptocurrencies â but again Iâm not weighing on any particular innovation or any particular asset.â
According to Peirce, the Winklevoss proposal was worthy of approval.
In both interview and in her Friday statement, Peirce argued that Bats BZX Exchange, the exchange that filed the proposed rule change and pushed for a review following the rejection by agency staff in March 2017, had satisfied the requirements as dictated by the Securities Exchange Act.
She argued that it was wrong for the agency to focus on manipulation in the spot market for bitcoin and that the risks in question were taken into consideration when BZX made its pitch to the SEC.
âI think the exchange, in making a decision to list this particular product, had looked into whether it thought investors were interested in it, and if investors are interested in it, I donât see why we should stop them from having access to it.â
Indeed, in her Friday statement, Peirce contended that âapproval of this order would demonstrate our commitment to acting within the scope of our limited role in regulating the securities markets.â
âIf someone is trying to raise money for a legitimate project, as long as the person explains what heâs trying to do and what heâs going to do with the money that reveals everything material that investors need to know â I donât think we should stand in the way,â she later told CoinDesk.
Support or not, Peirceâs remarks earned her a big boost in Twitter followers, which as of the time of writing stands at roughly 15,800. Data from analytics site SocialBlade shows that at the start of the month, her follower count was at 1,275, representing a 1,139 percent increase.
And while she clarified that sheâs not an advocate for bitcoin or cryptocurrencies, she said she finds the work around the technology âreally exciting.â
âItâs not that Iâm supporting any one asset, itâs just that Iâm supporting the ingenuity and the creativity and the curiosity thatâs motivating people to invest their time and money in these new technologies,â she said. âI think thatâs exciting. But again, I canât weigh in on any particular asset, including bitcoin.â
But according to Peirce, the crypto-faithful who are following her shouldnât expect too many fireworks.
She concluded:
âItâs that my guess is that most of those followers will find most of my tweets very boring. Most of them are about very dull regulatory things.â
Hester Peirce image via YouTube/Elizabeth Warren