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Austin Campbell Argues That the Clarity Act, a Critical Bill for Cryptocurrencies, Is Unlikely to Pass

source-logo  en.bitcoinsistemi.com 1 h
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Speaking about the eagerly awaited legal regulations in the cryptocurrency sector, former JP Morgan and Citi executive Austin Campbell made statements that could change the industry’s perspective on the market structure law known as the “Clarity Act.”

Campbell argued that the quality of the law’s content and the approaches of the institutions involved were far more critical than whether the law passed at all.

Campbell specifically criticized the demands from large banks to ban stablecoin yields. He argued that banks were trying to block these yields because they saw stablecoins as a threat, claiming this was a major mistake.

“By opposing stablecoin yields, large banks are actually increasing their own funding costs and harming the global competitiveness of the US dollar. Stablecoin reserves are mostly held in instruments such as bank deposits and treasury bonds. Banks, who could be the biggest beneficiaries of this system, are lobbying against their own interests because of leaders who don’t understand the issue.”

Campbell stated that the bill was likely to fail due to political infighting in the Senate and disagreements among major institutions. However, he added that this was not the end of the world.

According to the analyst, the Clarity Act has become somewhat less important now that the “Genius Act” (or similar stablecoin regulations) has been passed. A legal framework is now emerging for banks to enter this field.

Campbell, who remains optimistic about the future, predicts that by 2035, much information and many assets, from property records to driver’s licenses, will be transferred to the blockchain.

*This is not investment advice.

en.bitcoinsistemi.com