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It wasn’t so long ago (earlier this month) that the US appeared to be following a path of outright hostility towards the crypto industry, seemingly keen to force out crypto-native enterprises even as several other regions around the world were opening their doors to crypto integration.
This, at times, has been seen as a belligerent attitude led by the SEC and aggressive enough for some crypto industry participants, including some influential figures, to speculate that it’s an orchestrated attempt to halt crypto development. In fact, this theory even has a name: Operation Choke Point 2.0 (a reference to a banking investigative operation from 2013 to 2017 by the US Department of Justice that was heavily criticized for allegedly bypassing due process.)
There are also, it should be noted, plenty of observers who dismiss this theory. Plus, it’s true that proponents of the idea that there’s a behind-the-scenes anti-crypto campaign tend to overlook the very real irregularities highlighted at some major crypto platforms, which, as in the case of an entity like FTX, have sometimes caused enormous damage to users.
Still though, whichever side of that debate you happen to fall on, what’s becoming clear is that this month has seen an enormous shift in the US crypto landscape, resulting in a dramatic turnaround in sentiment.
June began ominously, with the SEC suing both Binance and Coinbase (ranked, respectively, as the first and third biggest crypto exchanges in the world by average daily volumes) and creating the outward impression of a regulatory body that was on the warpath and gunning for crypto.
Perhaps at least partly as a result of these events, the price of bitcoin dropped, dipping below the $25,000 mark after an impressively bullish year to date. Moreover, the general sentiment took a hit, as it began to appear that even as other regions of the world were looking seriously at ways to integrate crypto, the US, if the attitude of the SEC was indicative of a wider plan, was willing to cut itself off from the entire industry.
Find out more about the list of tools to help you in your crypto trading
Against this backdrop, the middle of the month saw BlackRock turn the entire situation on its head, as the world’s largest asset management company filed an application to operate a Bitcoin spot ETF. While the SEC has approved Bitcoin futures ETFs in the past, 28 applications for spot ETFs (from entities other than BlackRock) have been rejected.
One can’t help but be struck by BlackRock’s timing, with its application running directly counter to the growing impression of a regulatory environment at war with crypto, and the application raised questions that cross over into politics. Was BlackRock’s CEO, Larry Fink, who is seen as supportive of the Democratic Party, using his considerable influence to send a message not only to the SEC, but even to the Democrat administration itself, signaling that Bitcoin, and perhaps crypto more widely, is not a sector that the US should be opting out of or pushing offshore?
85% of crypto trade volume occurs outside the US
Capital goes where it’s welcome
Either way, observers noted that of the 576 ETF applications ever made by BlackRock, all but one had been accepted, and the markets certainly received a message, regardless of behind-the-scenes intent, with bitcoin now trading above $30,000.
Newly buoyant sentiment has been bolstered by a sequence of further Bitcoin spot ETF applications from other firms, with Fidelity, Invesco, Wisdom Tree and Valkyrie all following BlackRock’s lead. What’s more, the second half of June saw the launch of EDX Markets, a crypto exchange backed by finance industry giants including Citadel, Fidelity and Charles Schwab.
For several years, a narrative around Bitcoin has been that the institutions are coming, and now very suddenly, and at an unexpected moment, this part of the script seemed to be playing out at pace. There was also, recently, a further curious development, as the SEC approved a leveraged Bitcoin futures ETF for the first time, leading critics to wonder at the logic behind approving leveraged futures ahead of a straightforward spot mechanism, and whether this could be indicative of an incoming SEC shift.
A more nuanced approach to crypto in the US, as compared to the attitude displayed by the SEC, was on display when the Federal Reserve’s Chair, Jerome Powell stated last week, while testifying at the House Financial Services Committee, that: “crypto appears to have staying power as an asset class,” and he also explained that: “we do see payment stablecoins as money.”
Additionally, Powell maintained, on the subject of stablecoin issuance, that:
The crypto industry has proven to be a volatile arena over the past decade or so, and it’s always been the case that the prevailing mood can alter rapidly, but the effect of BlackRock’s most recent ETF application stands out in particular, suggesting the possibility of a consequential long-term readjustment in American institutional attitudes towards crypto.
It wasn’t so long ago (earlier this month) that the US appeared to be following a path of outright hostility towards the crypto industry, seemingly keen to force out crypto-native enterprises even as several other regions around the world were opening their doors to crypto integration.
This, at times, has been seen as a belligerent attitude led by the SEC and aggressive enough for some crypto industry participants, including some influential figures, to speculate that it’s an orchestrated attempt to halt crypto development. In fact, this theory even has a name: Operation Choke Point 2.0 (a reference to a banking investigative operation from 2013 to 2017 by the US Department of Justice that was heavily criticized for allegedly bypassing due process.)
There are also, it should be noted, plenty of observers who dismiss this theory. Plus, it’s true that proponents of the idea that there’s a behind-the-scenes anti-crypto campaign tend to overlook the very real irregularities highlighted at some major crypto platforms, which, as in the case of an entity like FTX, have sometimes caused enormous damage to users.
Still though, whichever side of that debate you happen to fall on, what’s becoming clear is that this month has seen an enormous shift in the US crypto landscape, resulting in a dramatic turnaround in sentiment.
June began ominously, with the SEC suing both Binance and Coinbase (ranked, respectively, as the first and third biggest crypto exchanges in the world by average daily volumes) and creating the outward impression of a regulatory body that was on the warpath and gunning for crypto.
Perhaps at least partly as a result of these events, the price of bitcoin dropped, dipping below the $25,000 mark after an impressively bullish year to date. Moreover, the general sentiment took a hit, as it began to appear that even as other regions of the world were looking seriously at ways to integrate crypto, the US, if the attitude of the SEC was indicative of a wider plan, was willing to cut itself off from the entire industry.
Find out more about the list of tools to help you in your crypto trading
Against this backdrop, the middle of the month saw BlackRock turn the entire situation on its head, as the world’s largest asset management company filed an application to operate a Bitcoin spot ETF. While the SEC has approved Bitcoin futures ETFs in the past, 28 applications for spot ETFs (from entities other than BlackRock) have been rejected.
One can’t help but be struck by BlackRock’s timing, with its application running directly counter to the growing impression of a regulatory environment at war with crypto, and the application raised questions that cross over into politics. Was BlackRock’s CEO, Larry Fink, who is seen as supportive of the Democratic Party, using his considerable influence to send a message not only to the SEC, but even to the Democrat administration itself, signaling that Bitcoin, and perhaps crypto more widely, is not a sector that the US should be opting out of or pushing offshore?
85% of crypto trade volume occurs outside the US
Capital goes where it’s welcome
Either way, observers noted that of the 576 ETF applications ever made by BlackRock, all but one had been accepted, and the markets certainly received a message, regardless of behind-the-scenes intent, with bitcoin now trading above $30,000.
Newly buoyant sentiment has been bolstered by a sequence of further Bitcoin spot ETF applications from other firms, with Fidelity, Invesco, Wisdom Tree and Valkyrie all following BlackRock’s lead. What’s more, the second half of June saw the launch of EDX Markets, a crypto exchange backed by finance industry giants including Citadel, Fidelity and Charles Schwab.
For several years, a narrative around Bitcoin has been that the institutions are coming, and now very suddenly, and at an unexpected moment, this part of the script seemed to be playing out at pace. There was also, recently, a further curious development, as the SEC approved a leveraged Bitcoin futures ETF for the first time, leading critics to wonder at the logic behind approving leveraged futures ahead of a straightforward spot mechanism, and whether this could be indicative of an incoming SEC shift.
A more nuanced approach to crypto in the US, as compared to the attitude displayed by the SEC, was on display when the Federal Reserve’s Chair, Jerome Powell stated last week, while testifying at the House Financial Services Committee, that: “crypto appears to have staying power as an asset class,” and he also explained that: “we do see payment stablecoins as money.”
Additionally, Powell maintained, on the subject of stablecoin issuance, that:
The crypto industry has proven to be a volatile arena over the past decade or so, and it’s always been the case that the prevailing mood can alter rapidly, but the effect of BlackRock’s most recent ETF application stands out in particular, suggesting the possibility of a consequential long-term readjustment in American institutional attitudes towards crypto.
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