Regarding Prometheus’s “shady approval” as “the first and only special purpose broker-dealer for digital assets,” U.S. lawmakers are looking into the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA). Since Prometheum had no clients and no operational experience or track record, they expressed concerns about the timing and circumstances surrounding the approval. The company’s connections to the Chinese government were also emphasised by the MPs. The “Lawmakers probe SEC” got into the headlines very quickly.
They want to know if the SEC used Prometheum as a model company to buttress Gary Gensler’s argument that the country’s current legal framework is adequate for regulating cryptocurrencies. Despite Prometheus’s assertions that it is essential for regulated digital asset offers, the MPs emphasised that the company hasn’t yet provided services to any clients. They also voiced alarm over possible connections between Prometheus and the Chinese Communist Party.
Demand for all Documents
The legislators requested in a letter to the SEC that the agency “provide all documents and communications, between and among SEC employees, related or referring to Prometheus’s application to become a special purpose broker-dealer, as soon as possible but no later than 5:00 pm, August 22, 2023.” In 2020, the SEC established a new category of broker-dealers known as special purpose brokers-dealers (SPBDs) to enable the holding of securities backed by digital assets. Prometheum Ember Capital LLC received FINRA approval as the first SPBD in May 2023. However, FINRA has not yet accepted any of the other companies that have requested SPBD accreditation. Lawmakers emphasised: “The timing and circumstances surrounding the approval of Promethium as the first SPBD raise serious questions.”
Target is not just SEC
Seven financial regulators have received a letter from five US legislators asking them what steps they are taking to stop the revolving door between their organisations and the cryptocurrency business. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-MI), Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY), and Rep. Jess G. “Chuy” Garcia (D-IL) all signed the letters, which were dated Oct. 24.
The letters were sent to Gary Gensler, Chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Rostin Behnam, Chair of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), Janet Yellen, Treasury Secretary, Jerome Powell, Martin Gruenberg, Acting Chair of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), Michael J. Hsu, the OCC’s acting comptroller, and Rohit Chopra, the CFPB’s director. Thus the Lawmaker’s probe of SEC was just one part of the whole controversy
The Reason Behind
The MPs said in their letter, “We write inquiring as to the measures your agency is taking to stop the revolving door between our financial regulatory institutions and the cryptocurrency (crypto) industry. To ensure favorable regulatory results as Congress and federal agencies work to develop and implement regulations to oversee this multi-trillion dollar economy, the crypto sector has dramatically increased its lobbying activities in recent months, spending millions in that endeavour. The dispute surrounding “Lawmakers Probe SEC” has this as its basis.
The Bottom Line
Americans should have faith that regulators are acting in the public’s best interests rather than applying for a lucrative lobbying position after leaving government employment. However, these imperatives are undermined by the quickly turning revolving door that leads out of government and into the cryptocurrency industry, the parliamentarians emphasized.
Their letters conclude with a list of queries about the policies of each agency to stop a hiring cycle with the cryptocurrency sector. One query, for instance, inquires as to what codes of conduct and openness are established to guarantee the honesty of agency officials. Another worry is how each agency safeguards its rules from being improperly affected by potential conflicts of interest involving current or past workers. The regulators were requested to respond by November 7th.
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