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Why Congress Needs to Act on Digital Assets – Reps. French Hill and Bryan Steil

Last November, the American people clearly spoke. They support President Trump and the agenda he campaigned on: A “Golden Age” in America. A key component of President Trump’s agenda is leveraging the U.S.’s leadership in advanced technology and economic strength for the benefit of all Americans.
Nowhere is this renewed focus on using our strengths for the future more necessary than in the development of digital assets and blockchain operations, where Washington has been asleep at the wheel for far too long.
According to surveys, 55% of American investors own Bitcoin, and more than 40 million own some type of cryptocurrency. Even our largest financial institutions are now embracing digital assets and the transformative power of blockchain technology. There is little doubt that these innovations will make financial products more affordable and accessible. From stablecoins to tokenization of assets, to decentralized finance applications, these advancements have the potential to lower costs and expand opportunities for both investors and consumers.
Despite its transformative potential and widespread adoption, the Biden-Harris Administration refused to recognize the promise of this technology. Officials weren’t just indifferent – they were openly hostile. No matter how safe or innovative, products associated with «crypto» or «digital assets» were stonewalled and litigated into purgatory. Regulators refused to provide meaningful guidance on how this technology could be implemented in a compliant manner. Worse, they implemented new policies to make adoption even more difficult.
Today is a new day. There is broad agreement that we need fit-for-purpose regulation that unlocks opportunities while providing the consumer and national security protections Americans deserve. The world counts on us to ensure that global payment systems are not used for nefarious purposes, including financing terrorism and drug trafficking. Because of the Biden-Harris Administration’s abdication of responsibility over the past four years, the United States has fallen behind and others, including our adversaries, are developing products and systems that threaten the primacy of the dollar.
Despite the Biden-Harris Administration’s reluctance, during the last Congress House Republicans led the charge and passed landmark legislation creating a forward-looking regulatory framework for digital assets. This bipartisan bill provides appropriate protections for consumers and proactively addresses national security and money laundering issues while securing the United States as a leader in digital assets and blockchain innovation.
Congressional Republicans will now pick up where we left off and work in a bicameral manner with the Trump Administration and financial regulators to ensure that the open hostility from the Executive Branch of the past four years is eliminated.
Congress has a unique opportunity to enact legislation that plays to American strengths. We will provide a foundation that will unleash innovation in the digital assets and blockchain space, while at the same time solidifying the status of the U.S. dollar as the reserve currency and the preferred method of payment for lawful transactions around the globe.
As leaders of digital assets on the House Financial Services Committee, our immediate priorities include establishing a federal framework with clear rules around stablecoins, providing clarity for the initial sale and distribution of tokens, creating pathways for the registration of centralized platforms for the trading of tokens, implementing strong protections against money laundering and terrorist financing, and ensuring fair competition.
We have already begun this work by recently releasing our discussion draft to establish a framework for the issuance and operation of dollar-denominated payment stablecoins in the United States.
There are those who share the Biden-Harris administration’s view that the digital assets ecosystem is, in the words of former SEC Chair Gary Gensler, “full of hucksters, fraudsters, and scam artists.” But that sentiment only underscores the urgent need for these efforts. Effective legislation and proactive regulatory engagement will ensure good actors with innovative products can thrive in the U.S. and consumers are appropriately protected from rug pulls, market manipulation, and other fraudulent activity.
We are the world leaders in finance and technology because, over our history, we have looked forward and embraced innovation as a means of lowering costs, increasing opportunity, and enhancing protections. We need to be true to our history and do it again.
With our newly formed Bicameral Working Group for Digital Assets, we will work in lockstep with Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott, Senate Agriculture Chairman John Boozman, House Agriculture Chairman G.T. Thompson, and White House Crypto Czar David Sacks to advance legislation that delivers on the promises we made to the American people. The “Golden Age” of digital assets in the United States begins now.
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5 Ways the SEC Can Embrace Innovation

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has long been the world’s most influential financial regulator, helping to ensure our capital markets are the deepest, fairest, and most accessible in the world. But its continued relevance will depend on whether it can do more than merely respond to innovation — it must proactively foster it.
For nearly a century, the SEC has adapted to evolving markets, new technologies and greater retail participation. In its best moments, the agency has embraced innovation in service of transparency, investor protection, and capital formation. But in recent years, it has strayed from that legacy — nowhere more visibly than in its approach to crypto and blockchain.
The good news is, with a change in leadership and a more open posture emerging, the SEC has a chance to course-correct. But the bigger question is: how do we make that change permanent? How do we build innovation into the SEC’s DNA so that the next promising financial technology isn’t strangled in its crib?
I spent nearly six years at the SEC, first as a Senior Counsel in the Division of Enforcement and then as Chief Counsel in the Office of Legislative and Intergovernmental Affairs. I’ve since held senior legal and policy roles in crypto firms across the ecosystem. From both perspectives, one thing is clear: the SEC can fulfill its mission more effectively — and maintain its global leadership — only if it becomes a proactive partner in financial innovation.
The SEC at Its Best
The SEC has a proud history of embracing change to the benefit of investors and markets alike. In the 1990s, it digitized corporate filings through EDGAR, replacing paper documents with searchable databases. It later approved Regulation ATS, enabling the rise of alternative trading systems that increased competition and liquidity. ETFs, which were once novel, are now mainstream products that offer low-cost, diversified exposure to a wide range of assets. More recently, fractional-share trading has empowered millions of retail investors to own a slice of companies they once could only admire from afar.
One especially relevant example as the SEC thinks about how to regulate crypto is the agency’s treatment of asset-backed securities. In the 1980s and 1990s, the SEC recognized that these complex financial products didn’t fit neatly into existing disclosure regimes. After years of study and no-action letters, it developed a tailored disclosure framework in 2004 — refined further in 2014 — that balanced innovation with investor protection. And it didn’t need to bring hundreds of enforcement actions to do it.
When the SEC Fell Behind
There are also times the SEC failed to adapt, to the detriment of both investors and markets. It was slow to respond to the rise of high-frequency trading, contributing to the 2010 Flash Crash. It took years to implement the crowdfunding rules authorized by the JOBS Act. It lagged on digital reporting standards, delaying broader access to market data.
And, for much of the last few years, its stance on crypto veered from caution to outright hostility. Instead of issuing clear rules for digital assets, the agency pursued a scattershot enforcement campaign — often against firms that were seeking to comply in good faith. Many of these actions didn’t even involve fraud or investor loss. Meanwhile, American crypto companies fled overseas, and a global industry flourished without us.
Even the SEC’s grudging approval of spot bitcoin ETFs in 2024 came only after it was forced by a federal court. And while the agency at one point talked about creating a crypto disclosure framework akin to what it did for ABS, it never followed through.
Innovation Isn’t the Enemy
Crypto may be new, but the SEC has faced this challenge before. It knows how to modernize its rules to meet new realities. What’s different now is the opportunity to leverage innovation — not just regulate it.
Take blockchain technology. It could enable near-instant trade settlement, reducing risk and freeing up capital. It could improve market transparency through immutable records and real-time transaction data. It could lower operational costs by reducing intermediaries. And tokenization could expand access to private markets and hard-to-reach asset classes, benefiting both issuers and investors.
Ironically, the SEC hasn’t seriously explored how blockchain could improve its own market oversight. That’s a missed opportunity. But it’s not too late.
A Blueprint for the Future
So what would it look like to build innovation into the SEC’s core mission?
- Revise the SEC’s Mandate: Congress should amend the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 to explicitly include the promotion of innovation and modernization, alongside investor protection, market integrity, and capital formation.
- Rethink Metrics of Success: The SEC shouldn’t measure success solely by the number of enforcement actions or penalties collected. It should also look to capital formation, investor confidence, and the safe adoption of new technologies.
- Create an Innovation Office: A dedicated, empowered team should engage with entrepreneurs, technologists, and academics to guide responsible innovation — just as similar offices in the U.K. and Singapore have done.
- Adopt Risk-Based Regulation: Not every new product or platform needs full regulatory treatment on day one. Pilot programs, safe harbors, and regulatory sandboxes can help innovators test ideas while maintaining appropriate guardrails.
- Invest in Education and Training: SEC staff need better fluency in emerging technologies. Cross-disciplinary expertise should be rewarded and cultivated.
These are not radical ideas — they are proven tools drawn from the SEC’s own playbook.
In a global race to define the future of finance, the SEC has a choice: lead or fall behind. Its greatest strength has always been its credibility and ability to adapt.
The next generation of investors and entrepreneurs won’t wait around for 20th-century rules to catch up to 21st-century innovation. Nor should they have to. If the SEC wants to remain the gold standard, it must adapt once again — not just to the present, but to what comes next.
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Is ETH Still Special?

We are never shy about holding ETH to account as crypto’s second largest asset and the DeFi intuition gateway for traditional investors. But mainstream adoption requires a growth story, and so far this year ETH is (put kindly) failing to lead.
ETH sits in 16th place in the CoinDesk 20 YTD performance leaderboard, down 53%. Going back a year, the numbers look similar: 15th place and down 50%. Its market cap has dwindled so much relative to XRP that both are expected to be capped in the upcoming CoinDesk 20 reconstitution, a first.
ETH’s woes are news to few in the industry, but for us as index and product builders for «5%-ers,» it begs the question: is ETH still special? A distinguished provenance can only take you so far. ETH continues to dominate its on-chain categories (even before adding in L2s) and is arguably the second best brand name in crypto. There are even thoughtful ideas about ETH’s end-state as an essential supporting component of our blockchain future; we hear expressions like, «Ethereum will be the clearinghouse of DeFi.»
But mainstream adoption requires a growth story.
We have observed over the last few weeks that bitcoin has shown impressive resilience to fragile global markets. This past week was no exception, and as we pointed out last week, expectations for higher inflation – now echoed by Fed Chair Powell – could help support movement into bitcoin.
But the crypto market’s dependency on bitcoin to lead prices higher is one we hope the digital asset class outgrows. ETH can reassert a leadership position, as it briefly did in the weeks following the U.S. election. If not, CoinDesk 20 investors have exposure to much of ETH’s competition.
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GSR Anchors $100M Investment in Upexi to Purchase SOL, Stock Rockets 700%

Crypto trading firm GSR led a $100 million private placement into Upexi (UPXI), a consumer-goods company pivoting to a digital asset-based treasury strategy.
The company, whose products include medicinal mushroom gummies and pet-grooming tools, said it will use the capital to accumulate and stake solana (SOL) tokens. The Tampa, Florida-based company had a market cap of $3 million on Friday.
The investment, structured as a private investment in public equity (PIPE), comes as Upexi shifts from physical product manufacturing to managing part of its balance sheet using Solana, a high-speed blockchain known for low fees and fast settlement, according to a press release.
The investment announcement sent Upexi’s stock soaring more than 700%, from around $2.30 to $19 at the time of writing.
GSR’s involvement points to a growing overlap between public markets and blockchain finance.
“This investment highlights the growing demand for efficient, secure access to high-quality crypto assets in public markets” Brian Rudick, GSR’s head of research, said in a statement.
Solana Foundation president Lily Liu said the deal marked another step in connecting traditional financial firms with decentralized infrastructure.
The move “underscores GSR’s confidence in Solana as a leading high-performance blockchain,” the finance company said in a release.
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