Crypto Enforcement Actions May Be Held Off Under Trump: TD Cowen
The cryptocurrency industry has faced multiple lawsuits from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
over the last few years, but multinational investment bank TD Cowen believes the tides will likely
change under a Trump administration.President-elect Donald Trump has vowed support for Bitcoin and the
broader crypto sector.No Crypto Enforcement Actions Under Trump?TD Cowen researchers wrote Monday that
they believe "crypto enforcement will likely be placed on hold once Trump names a new SEC chair, which
he can do on Jan. 20 regardless of whether Gary Gensler resigns his seat as an SEC commissioner."The
projection comes months after Trump promised to "fire" Gensler during his keynote speech at the Bitcoin
Conference 2024.Under Gensler's leadership, the SEC slapped lawsuits and Wells Notices on crypto firms
it accused of violating securities laws by offering tokens and other services the financial regulator
designated as securities.Advocacy group the Blockchain Association reported that as of Nov. 1, 2024, SEC
enforcement cost the crypto industry at least $429 million.TD Cowen researchers claim that the possible
hold-off on enforcement actions targeting the crypto sector "doesn't mean it will be the Wild West for
crypto without any SEC oversight."Instead, they believe that a new chair will reassess existing cases
the financial regulator initiated against crypto firms "and look for ways to provide more clarity on how
crypto companies can comply with existing laws."Bipartisan Legislation More LikelyBills focused on
providing a regulatory framework for the crypto industry with bipartisan support are also more likely
under Trump, TD Cowen researchers said. The crypto community has helped elect the "most pro-crypto
Congress" in U.S. history, as some industry executives put it. Republicans have also reclaimed the
Senate, raising hopes for crypto bills to move faster.On the other hand, the researchers don't expect
crypto-centric legislation to be the first priority of Congress or the Trump government. "Crypto will
not be an initial priority for Team Trump given the focus on extending the tax cuts and tackling tariffs
and trade," they said.A Warning to Stop Blocking AML/BSA OversightThe researchers also warned that
continuously rejecting "any government oversight" on concerns related to AML/BSA (anti-money
laundering—Bank Secrecy Act) compliance will only further delay political work toward delivering crypto
bills."We continue to believe that this is a losing argument for the crypto space that hurts the
industry politically. We believe crypto market structure legislation would become more likely if there
was a broad crypto sector embrace of AML/BSA compliance," they emphasized.Notably, the outgoing
administration, Gensler included, has repeatedly said the broader crypto industry is non-compliant with
AML-related and security concerns.