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Global crypto regulation is shaping a new map of winners and losers | Opinion

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The global conversation around crypto regulation usually starts with laws and ends with enforcement. Is that bad? Not necessarily, but it is missing a big part of the puzzle. What it misses is the quieter, more consequential movement happening underneath…talent is moving.

Summary
  • Crypto regulation is really a talent competition — builders move faster than laws, and jurisdictions that offer clarity and speed attract the people who actually create the ecosystem.
  • Uncertainty repels execution — piecemeal, enforcement-first regulation (like in the U.S.) pushes founders to optimize for legal safety instead of product, while places like the UAE and Hong Kong signal support and pull talent in.
  • Talent migration compounds into ecosystems — once leaders relocate, startups, capital, and institutions follow, making regulatory delay a slow but structural loss rather than a neutral stance.

And unlike capital, engineers and founders don’t wait for frameworks to stabilize. They follow opportunity, momentum, and clarity, wherever those happen to emerge. This isn’t about some strange ideology. It’s about management.

While the U.S. regulators continue to debate classifications and compliance regimes, other jurisdictions have made the simpler calculation that crypto innovation is a talent game, and talent is global, mobile, and increasingly impatient. Policy, in this context, is more about competitive positioning.

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The UAE has found the solution to this

The result is a slow but unmistakable re-mapping of where crypto infrastructure, leadership, and decision-making actually live. One jurisdiction that has nailed this is the UAE. Across Dubai and Abu Dhabi, regulators have paired tailored crypto frameworks with fast licensing processes, long-term residency visas, and explicit mandates to build digital asset ecosystems.

Instead of asking whether crypto should exist, UAE policymakers asked where it should be built, and then set out to attract the people capable of building it. The result has been a visible clustering of senior leadership, startups, and institutional players in the region. This matters because talent migration compounds.

Remote work accelerated the trend, but crypto made it permanent. Developers, risk managers, product leads, and founders now work across borders by default.

According to multiple industry surveys, a majority of crypto-native professionals already work remotely or in hybrid global teams. Geography has stopped being an anchor, but regulation still determines where companies incorporate, raise capital, and hire at scale. That’s where divergence begins.

US regulatory uncertainty has become a drag

In the U.S., regulatory uncertainty has quietly become a drag on execution. Founders devote significant time to legal positioning rather than product and service development. While the current administration has made notable strides in improving sentiment toward crypto, the previous administration’s more anti-crypto stance has left the U.S. several steps behind jurisdictions like the UAE, which never imposed those barriers in the first place.

Senior leaders hedge public statements. Hiring teams struggle to forecast whether their company’s core business model will even be permissible in two years. The issue isn’t that regulation exists; it’s that it arrives piecemeal, retroactively, and often through enforcement rather than rulemaking.

Hong Kong’s recent push to relax crypto-trading restrictions and launch a tokenization pilot program wasn’t just a policy announcement; it was also, in a way, a recruitment signal. It told builders and executives that experimentation would be supported, not punished, and that infrastructure innovation was a strategic priority.

The UAE has taken a similar approach, pairing clear licensing regimes with long-term visas, capital incentives, and fast-moving regulators who see fintech as an economic pillar rather than a reputational risk. These moves aren’t about becoming “crypto havens.” They’re about anchoring talent. Once senior talent relocates, physically or legally, everything else follows.

It becomes a domino effect

Startups incorporate nearby. Venture capital sets up offices. Universities tailor programs. Service providers specialize. Over time, ecosystems form that are difficult to unwind. This isn’t theoretical; it’s how Silicon Valley, Singapore, and London each emerged in earlier technology cycles.

Crypto is now entering that same sorting process. From a management perspective, the implications are stark. Companies are being forced to make jurisdictional decisions earlier than ever, not because of tax arbitrage, but because of hiring risk. Where can we legally issue equity? Where can we onboard engineers without compliance friction? Where can leadership speak publicly without exposure? These questions increasingly outweigh market access in strategic planning.

Talent notices this, too. Highly skilled professionals don’t just optimize for compensation. They optimize for optionality. They want to work in environments where their expertise compounds, where networks are dense, and where sudden regulatory changes won’t erase years of effort. When top performers begin moving elsewhere, the opportunity cost of staying rises for everyone left behind.

Accepting crypto is no longer enough to win the race

This is where regulation stops being a domestic issue. A country doesn’t need to “ban” crypto to lose the game.

All it needs to do is move slowly while others move decisively. Talent migration doesn’t happen overnight, and it rarely announces itself. It shows up first in conference attendance, then in hiring emails, then in leadership teams quietly relocating through second passports and international entities.

By the time policymakers notice, the ecosystem has already thinned. The irony is that many regulators believe they’re containing risk, when in reality they’re exporting it, along with the people best equipped to manage it.

The next generation of financial infrastructure isn’t just code; it’s governance, security, and risk architecture built by experienced professionals. When those professionals leave, so does the ability to shape standards rather than inherit them.

Read more: The next phase of onchain finance needs regulatory infrastructure, not just issuers | Opinion
Basil Al Askari

Basil Al Askari is the founder and CEO of MidChains, a regulated virtual asset trading platform based in Abu Dhabi and Dubai, UAE, focused on HNWI, corporate, and institutional markets.

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