Rostin Behnam, chairman of the United States Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), has said he will continue efforts for the agency to regulate non-security tokens.
In remarks released for a Feb. 3 American Bar Association event, Behnam pointed to “bankruptcies, failures and runs” as part of the justification for the U.S. Congress to give the CFTC the authority to address regulation for cryptocurrencies. According to Benham, the commission was “well positioned” to address regulatory gaps but deferred to U.S. lawmakers to pull the trigger on legislation.
“Regulation is necessary to protect customers and to prevent failures which cannot predictably be contained within any boundaries across the domestic and global financial markets,” said Behnam. “Regardless of whether one or many occur in 2023 or 2033, we must act. There is a new Congress, and I will continue to engage and provide technical assistance to draft legislation, as requested.”
Today @CFTCbehnam will deliver a keynote address at the ABA Business Law Section Derivatives & Futures Law Committee Winter Meeting. Read it as prepared here: https://t.co/PZuT4vzrBr
— CFTC (@CFTC) February 3, 2023
According to the CFTC chairman, budget increases for the commission would also help grow its enforcement team, which has brought 69 crypto-related actions to date — a list that includes FTX, Ooki DAO and others. Behnam said the team was “working toward another strong year of precedent-setting cases” against fraudulent or illegal digital asset projects.
Related: CFTC slammed for ‘blatant regulation by enforcement’ over Ooki DAO case
Though the political makeup of the 118th Congress differs slightly from that of its predecessor, it’s unclear if the CFTC will be given additional authority under Behnam. One of the pieces of legislation lawmakers may revisit is the Lummis-Gillibrand Responsible Financial Innovation Act — a bill first introduced in June 2022 aimed at addressing the roles of the CFTC and Securities and Exchange Commission on crypto regulation.