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Crypto’s Debanking Worries Hit Another Big Stage in U.S. House

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The chief lawyer of U.S. crypto exchange Coinbase (COIN) testified about the abuse of authority from regulators who erected barriers between banks and crypto firms in a hearing of the House Financial Services Committee on Thursday, marking the latest advance in the digital assets industry’s reversal of policy resistance in Washington.

Coinbase Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal’s complaints about «regulation by exhaustion» were met with wide agreement from Republican lawmakers eager to criticize the Biden administration’s crypto performance. The lawmakers also agreed with Grewal’s view that financial regulators such as the FDIC publicly insisted that they weren’t against crypto while privately directing banks away from the industry.

The House hearing, led by the panel’s oversight subcommittee, came directly on the heels of a Wednesday Senate Banking Committee hearing that also dug into crypto «debanking» in the U.S.

«Biden regulators resorted to vague, interpretive regulatory letters threatening banks with negative examination scores and fines if they continue their partnership with digital asset companies,» said Representative Dan Meuser, a Pennsylvania Republican who leads the House subcommittee. «This is serious overreach, one that not only undermines innovation, but directly harms consumers by restricting their access to new and beneficial financial products.»

Meanwhile, the panel’s Democrats flagged concerns with President Donald Trump’s own crypto business efforts and pushed back on the argument that cautioning banks against ties with the volatile, fraud-ladened sector was appropriate.

«Regulators asking banks to consider the risk associated with the crypto currency industry does not amount to debanking, as my Republican friends are indicating,» said Representative Al Green, a Texas lawmaker who is the subcommittee’s ranking Democrat. «Regulators simply urged banks to exercise caution when dealing with this emerging and potentially risky industry.»

A frustrated judge

As the issue was placed under the light of congressional scrutiny for the second day running, Coinbase has been basking in a combination of positive court sentiment and an FDIC policy reversal. The company’s legal pursuit of FDIC documents under the Freedom of Information Act have not only gone its way, but a judge in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia was incensed about the way the FDIC resisted the request for its communications with banks about crypto.

Read More: U.S. Regulator Told Banks to Avoid Crypto, Letters Obtained by Coinbase Reveal

An FDIC lawyer had asked Judge Ana Reyes to give some extra time while the agency adjusts under new leadership, but the judge refused, saying, «I don’t care who your management is.» She contended the FDIC’s position on the case had been «laughable,» according to a court transcript, and that she wanted to not only refuse the delay but to «speed it up dramatically.» The judge also demanded answers on accusations that the regulator may have destroyed documents that were related to the case.

«Do you understand that right now if I find — and there’s going to be an investigation — that any documents were destroyed or if we can’t figure out whether any documents were destroyed, you guys are going to come in for some serious sanctions?» the judge asked.

FDIC turnaround

The FDIC jumped to release more documents before the court’s deadline this week, and Acting Chairman Travis Hill, who President Donald Trump elevated as he took office last month, said he ordered the agency’s staff to review supervisory communications with banks about crypto. The regulator publicly posted «a large batch of documents» in the meantime, he said. 

«Acting Chairman Hill has begun to right this wrong,» said Coinbase Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal in a posting on social media site X, adding that «much more discovery is required.»

While the FDIC has taken much of the heat for the U.S. banking regulators’ efforts to limit banks’ exposure to crypto clients, Senator Cynthia Lummis revealed an internal Federal Reserve document in a Wednesday hearing that she said provided «hard proof of Operation Chokepoint.» That’s the name the industry has adopted to characterize the set of informal, behind-the-scenes actions undertaken by regulators to pressure U.S. banks to debank crypto. The Fed’s policy seemed to suggest regulatory scrutiny for bankers who engage in controversial speech or activities.

The interest from the House Financial Services Committee will continue next week with a February 11 hearing entitled «A Golden Age of Digital Assets: Charting a Path Forward.» That «Golden Age» phrase echoes what Trump’s crypto czar, David Sacks, said was coming for the industry in his first press conference.

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Memecoins Under Pressure as SHIB, Dogecoin Slide After Shibarium Loses $2.4M in Hack

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Top meme tokens traded under pressure as a multimillion dollar hack of Shiba Inu’s layer-2 network, Shibarium, dented investor confidence in joke cryptocurrencies.

On Sunday, Shibarium fell victim to a flash loan attack on its validator system, which drained about $2.4 million in ether (ETH) and SHIB. The CoinDesk Memecoin Index has dropped 6.6% in the past 24 hours. The broader market CoinDesk 20 Index (CD20) is down just 2.3%.

The attacker borrowed 4.6 million BONE, the governance token for the Shiba Inu ecosystem, often linked to the decentralized exchange (DEX) ShibaSwap, through a flash loan to gain control of the majority of validator keys. The keys act as gatekeepers of the network, confirming transactions and ensuring security.

With that control, the attacker was able to game the system into approving unauthorized transactions and walk away with a large amount of crypto assets from the bridge that connects Shibarium with the Ethereum blockchain. The process is akin to someone temporarily taking over a bank’s security system to approve unauthorized withdrawals. A flash loan is a loan raised with no upfront collateral and returns the borrowed assets within the same blockchain transaction.

The Shiba inu team was able to prevent a bigger, more serious breach because the BONE tokens used to gain control were reportedly tied to validator 1 and remained locked by the staking rules.

Nevertheless, markets reacted negatively breach, which again underscores the perennial security issues with blockchain technology.

Memecoins drop, broader market bid

SHIB fell by the most in three weeks on Sunday (UTC), losing 4% $0.00001369, and has continued to weaken to trade recently at $0.00001359. The cryptocurrency experienced considerable volatility throughout the 23-hour trading window ended Sept. 15 at 02:00 UTC, with the aggregate range encompassing $0.000006191, a 4% oscillation from peak to trough.

The session commenced with pre-dawn fragility as SHIB retreated from $0.000014156 to establish a pivotal trough of $0.000013547 at 14:00 UTC. Volume of 1.064 trillion tokens surpassed the 24-hour mean, signaling robust distribution pressure and prospective capitulation, according to CoinDesk Research’s technical analysis model.

The BONE token, which initially doubled to over 36 cents, is now down over 2% on a 24-hour basis, trading at around 20 cents.

According to the technical analysis model:

  • SHIB established a critical underpinning at $0.000013547 during elevated volume selling pressure exceeding 1.064 trillion tokens.
  • The token constructed successive higher lows and consolidation parameters between $0.000013600-$0.000013780.
  • Recovery momentum is demonstrated by ascending channel formations with sustained higher lows, indicating potential continuation towards the $0.000014000 resistance.
  • Volume patterns exceeded 24-hour averages during the decline phase, confirming potential capitulation levels.
  • Terminal hour trading exhibited decisive upward momentum with 1% appreciation, confirming a breach above the resistance threshold.

Large DOGE transfers add to bearish sentiment

Meanwhile, SHIB’s peer dogecoin (DOGE) fell 4% to 27.80 cents on Sunday and has since lost further 5% to 27.36 cents, according CoinDesk data.

A massive transfer of DOGE to a centralized exchange likely added to the bearish mood in the market. According to Whale Alert, crypto exchange OKX received 119,306,143 DOGE, worth over $34 million, from an unknown wallet. Such large transfers are typically associated with an intention to liquidate holdings.

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Fed Rate Decision, MKR-SKY Conversion Deadline: Crypto Week Ahead

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The U.S. Federal Reserve is likely to dominate markets, both crypto and traditional, in the coming week. Traders are positioned for a rate cut of at least 25 basis points when the Fed announces its decision on Sept. 17, according to CME’s Fedwatch tool.

What to Watch

  • Crypto
  • Macro
    • Sept. 16: Brazil July unemployment rate Est. N/A (Prev. 5.8%).
    • Sept. 16: Canada August headline CPI YoY Est. N/A (Prev. 1.7%), MoM Est. N/A (Prev. 0.3%); core YoY Est. N/A (Prev. 2.6%), MoM Est. N/A (Prev. 0.1%).
    • Sept. 16: U.K. July unemployment rate Est. 4.7%.
    • Sept. 17: U.K. August headline CPI YoY Est. 3.9%. MoM Est. N/A (Prev. 0.1%); core YoY Est. 3.7%, MoM Est. N/A (Prev. 0.2%).
    • Sept. 17: Canada benchmark interest rate Est. N/A (Prev. 2.75%) followed by a press conference.
    • Sept. 17: The Fed’s FOMC decision on U.S. interest rates. Est: 25 bps cut to 4.00%-4.25% followed by a press conference.
    • Sept. 17: Brazil benchmark interest rate Est. N/A (Prev. 15%).
    • Sept. 18: Bank of England decision on U.K. interest rates. Est: unchanged at 4%.
    • Sept. 19: Bank of Japan interest-rate decision. Est: unchanged at 0.5%.
  • Earnings (Estimates based on FactSet data)
    • Sept. 18: Lite Strategy (MEIP), pre-market

Token Events

  • Governance votes & calls
    • Curve DAO is voting to changes to donation-enabled Twocrypto contracts. Voting ends Sept. 16.
    • Sept. 16: Aster Network to host a community call.
    • MantleDAO is voting on keeping the 2025-2026 budget at $52 million USDc and 200 million MNT. Voting ends Sept. 18
    • Sept. 18, 6 a.m.: Mantle to host Mantle State of Mind, a monthly townhall series.
    • Sept. 16, 12 p.m.:Kava to host a community Ask Me Anything (AMA) session.
    • Sept. 23: SwissBorg to make a live announcement.
  • Unlocks
    • Sept. 15: Starknet (STRK) to unlock 5.98% of its circulating supply worth $17.09 million.
    • Sept. 15: Sei (SEI) to unlock 1.18% of its circulating supply worth $18.06 million.
    • Sept. 16: Arbitrum (ARB) to unlock 2.03% of its circulating supply worth $48.16 million.
    • Sept. 17: ZKsync (ZK) to unlock 3.61% of its circulating supply worth $10.54 million.
    • Sept. 18: Fasttoken (FTN) to unlock 2.08% of its circulating supply worth $89.8 million
    • Sept. 20: Velo (VELO) to unlock 13.63% of its circulating supply worth $43.39 million.
    • Sept. 20: KAITO (KAITO) to unlock 3.15% of its circulating supply worth $10.1 million.
  • Token Launches
    • Sept. 15: OpenLedger (OPENLEDGER) to be listed on Crypto.com.
    • Sept. 18: Deadline to convert MKR to SKY before the delayed upgrade penalty takes effect.
    • Sept. 20: Reserve Rights (RSR) to conduct a token burn.
    • Sept. 22: Falcon Finance to host community sale on Buidlpad.

Conferences

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Bank of England’s Proposed Stablecoin Ownership Limits are Unworkable, Says Crypto Group

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The Financial Times (FT) reported on Monday that cryptocurrency groups are urging the Bank of England (BoE) to scrap proposals limiting the amount of stablecoins individuals and businesses can own.

The group warned that the rules would leave the UK with stricter oversight than the U.S. or the European Union (EU).

According to the FT, BoE officials plan to impose caps of 10,000 british pounds to 20,000 british pounds ($13,600–$27,200) for individuals and about 10 million british pounds ($13.6 million) for businesses on all systemic stablecoins, defined as tokens already widely used for payments in the U.K. or expected to be in the future.

The central bank has argued the restrictions are needed to prevent outflows of deposits from banks that could weaken credit provision and financial stability.

The FT cited Sasha Mills, the BoE’s executive director for financial market infrastructure, as saying the limits would mitigate risks from sudden deposit withdrawals and the scaling of new systemic payment systems.

However, industry executives told the FT the plan is unworkable.

Tom Duff Gordon, Coinbase’s vice president of international policy, said “imposing caps on stablecoins is bad for U.K. savers, bad for the City and bad for sterling,” adding that no other major jurisdiction has imposed such limits.

Simon Jennings of the UK cryptoasset business council said enforcement would be nearly impossible without new systems such as digital IDs. Riccardo Tordera-Ricchi of The Payments Association told the FT that limits “make no sense” because there are no caps on cash or bank accounts.

The U.S. enacted the GENIUS Act in July, which establishes a federal framework for payment stablecoins. The law sets licensing, reserve and redemption standards for issuers, with no caps on individual holdings. The European Union has also moved ahead with its Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA), which is now fully in effect across the bloc.

Stablecoin-specific rules for asset-referenced and e-money tokens took effect on June 30, 2024, followed by broader provisions for crypto-assets and service providers on Dec. 30, 2024. Like the U.S. approach, MiCA does not cap holdings, instead focusing on reserves, governance and oversight by national regulators.

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