SEC’s Gensler is loyal to banks, not an impartial regulator — Rep. Tom Emmer
During a hearing on Sept. 27, Emmer hinted that Gary Gensler’s Wall Street background limits his impartiality as an industry regulator.
Archive context
Older archive item. Useful for background and entity history, but not a fresh market-moving signal.
During a hearing on Sept. 27, Emmer hinted that Gary Gensler’s Wall Street background limits his impartiality as an industry regulator.
Why this matters
This cryptocurrency story adds another data point to the current market tape and is useful when read alongside nearby source coverage.
Original source
Read on CointelegraphRelated market context
Crypto wanted to replace Wall Street – Instead, Wall Street took over crypto
Crypto was founded on a simple premise: people should be able to send, hold, and manage money without going through a bank. Fiftee...
Vitalik’s new Lean Ethereum plan puts ETH’s Wall Street pitch on a 4 year clock
Vitalik Buterin's July 4 Lean Ethereum post put a clock on ETH's institutional story: a protocol pitched as financial infrastructu...
Bitcoin’s Freedom Money to set Independence day liquidity benchmark while Wall Street shuts down
Bitcoin keeps trading when Wall Street stops. Independence Day turns that design choice into a market demonstration. Official exch...
Securitize benefits from BlackRock support as Wall Street adopts tokenized assets
Securitize's growth signals a shift in financial markets towards blockchain, with institutional backing potentially accelerating t...
How MiCA brings banks closer to controlling Europe’s stablecoin access
Europe's MiCA deadline has now entered the phase in which licenses begin to shape distribution. The first wave of concern centered...
Germany’s Sparkassen and cooperative banks to offer crypto trading via everyday banking apps
Germany's banks embracing crypto trading could accelerate mainstream adoption across Europe, reshaping financial landscapes and re...