According to Blockworks, during a hearing on Capitol Hill, lawmakers discussed the need for reform within the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Representative French Hill, R-AR, highlighted the SEC's recent court loss in its case against Debt Box, where the defendants accused the SEC of lying to freeze company assets. A Utah-based judge sanctioned the agency for 'bad faith conduct' and 'gross abuse of power.' Hill criticized the SEC's overreach and failure, which resulted in the use of taxpayer dollars to cover legal fees.
While the hearing was not solely focused on the SEC's actions against crypto companies or its general approach to crypto, other crypto-related actions were mentioned. John Gulliver, the executive director of the Committee on Capital Markets Regulation, was asked about SAB 121, the agency's Staff Accounting Bill, which aims to require digital asset custodians to report 'corresponding assets' and liabilities on balance sheets for custodied cryptocurrencies. The SEC's staff claimed that this would help mitigate 'risks and uncertainties' around safeguarding crypto assets. However, the House Financial Services Committee passed a resolution to appeal SAB 121 last month. Gulliver argued that the SEC should rescind SAB 121, as it is harmful to investors in crypto markets and prevents well-regulated financial institutions from providing custody services.
Jennifer Schulp from the Cato Institute stated that the SEC's current regulatory approach is the 'wrong one' because it drives business for newer technologies, including AI and crypto, overseas. She added that the current approach makes the regulatory environment uncertain and 'downright hostile.'