April 02, 2025
11 11 11 AM
Latest Post
Galaxy Secures UK Approval for License to Expand Derivatives Trading Ben Fielding: Decentralizing Machine Intelligence First Digital to ‘Pursue Legal Action’ Over Justin Sun Allegations as FDUSD Drops Avalanche’s AVAX Could Rise 10-Fold by 2029: Standard Chartered Solana’s Jupiter Buys DRiP Haus, DeFi Exchange’s First NFT Play Why a Diversified Approach to Crypto Investing Makes Sense Bitcoin ETFs Could See $3B in Q2 Inflows Even Without Price Recovery, Says Analyst Crypto’s Fairshake Notches Latest Wins in Florida Congressional Races 5 Crypto Tax Mistakes That Could Trigger an IRS Audit Fidelity Lets Investors Directly Invest in Crypto Through New Retirement Plan

U.S. Openness to Crypto Could Raise Risk Levels in TradFi, European Regulators Say

The U.S.’ crypto-friendly stance could increase the level of risk in financial markets by deepening the connections between traditional finance (TradFi) and the digital asset economy, according to regulator the European Securities and Markets Authority.

“This crypto-friendly stance has the potential to accelerate crypto adoption, including by institutional investors,” a spokesperson for the European Union’s financial markets regulator said in an interview. “This would in turn increase interconnectedness and, failing relevant safeguards, risks of negative spillover effects between crypto and traditional markets.”

Since becoming president on Jan. 20, Donald Trump has ordered his administration to set up a bitcoin reserve and urged it to establish crypto friendly policies. The crypto market had already reacted positively to Trump’s election victory in November, and bitcoin (BTC) climbed to a record high around $109,000 on the day he was sworn in, CoinDesk data showed.

In a joint report published Monday, ESMA, the European Banking Authority and the European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority identified “volatile crypto-asset valuations, driven by expectations of U.S. deregulatory policy agenda; increasing interconnections to traditional financial markets,” as a key driver in financial markets.

Separately, Piero Cipollone, an executive board member of the European Central Bank urged for a digital euro, an ECB-backed digital version of the single currency, to substitute for crypto assets, which he described as being “highly volatile and speculative in nature.”

“Furthermore, the United States’ push to maintain the dollar’s global dominance through the promotion of stablecoins worldwide presents its own set of challenges,” he said.

This post was originally published on this site