Biden administration could be friendly to crypto

In This Article:

Bitcoin (BTC), up 300% in the past 12 months, ether (ETH), up 700% in that time, and other top cryptocurrencies are on a dramatic bull run, driven by institutional investment and buy-in from big payments companies—and the fervor is bringing renewed attention to cryptocurrency regulation.

So, how might the Biden administration handle cryptocurrency? The answer depends on which member of the administration you examine. (President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris themselves have said next to nothing about crypto.)

Biden’s choice of Gary Gensler for SEC chairman was hailed by crypto flag-wavers as great news for the space. Gensler, former chairman of the CFTC (Commodity Futures Trading Commission), taught a 12-week course on cryptocurrency at MIT Sloan in Fall 2018 (“Blockchain and Money”), and has testified before Congress about cryptocurrency multiple times.

In a 2018 hearing in front of the House Agriculture Committee, former Minnesota Rep. Collin Peterson said that cryptocurrency “seems like a Ponzi scheme” and asked, “What’s behind this?” Gensler responded, “There’s really nothing behind gold either... Bitcoin is a modern form of digital gold.”

That is exactly what bitcoiners want to hear, especially as they have pushed the “digital gold” use case in the face of criticism that bitcoin isn’t really used as currency, and it certainly makes Gensler sound like a crypto believer.

In a 2019 op-ed for CoinDesk, Gensler also doubled down on the future potential of blockchain technology: “The potential this technology to be a catalyst for change is real... This last point – crypto and blockchain technology acting as a catalyst for change – may not fulfill the heightened expectations of maximalists, but may be [Satoshi] Nakamoto’s most enduring early contribution.”

Commodity Futures Trading Commission Chair Gary Gensler testifies at a Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee hearing on Capitol Hill July 30, 2013. REUTERS/Jose Luis Magana (UNITED STATES - Tags: POLITICS BUSINESS)
Gary Gensler, then Chairman of the CFTC, testifies at a Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee hearing on Capitol Hill July 30, 2013. Gensler is President Biden's pick for SEC Chairman. (REUTERS/Jose Luis Magana)

But Gensler has also said that he views both Facebook’s Libra token (recently rebranded to Diem) and Ripple’s XRP token as securities, and that they should be regulated as securities by the SEC. That could spell bad news for Ripple and XRP holders in the lawsuit the SEC filed against Ripple on previous SEC chair Jay Clayton’s second-to-last day in office. The SEC action labels Ripple’s sales of XRP as unregistered securities offerings based on the agency’s Howey Test, and Gensler’s commentary in 2018 suggests he agrees: “Ripple Labs sure seems like a common enterprise... Ripple is doing a lot to advance the value of XRP.” (Ripple cofounder Jed McCaleb sold off $8.7 million worth of his XRP holdings this week.)

In the 2019 CoinDesk op-ed, Gensler also said that crypto exchanges have not yet been “appropriately brought within public policy frameworks,” a sign that he wants to see more regulation of exchanges. As SEC chair, Gensler will find himself in a position to bless or delay the imminent IPO of crypto exchange Coinbase.