SEC's Gensler Won't Reveal His View on Trump's Bitcoin Reserve, Reiterates Bitcoin Isn't a Security
Gensler was responding to CNBC's question on whether the SEC chair was "warming up to top-tier crypto?"

- SEC Chair Gary Gensler has once again said that bitcoin is not a security and that "you can actually express that view by buying ETF products now."
- Given its election season, Gensler refused to reveal his view on Donald Trump's plan to have a bitcoin strategic reserve for the U.S.
- "Not liking the rules is not the same as that there aren't rules," he said insisting that current laws give the SEC the power to oversee the crypto space.
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chair Gary Gensler reiterated his stance that bitcoin
"As it relates to bitcoin, my predecessor and I have said, that's not a security," Gensler said. "You now have a way that you can actually express that view — buy into that through exchange-traded products." Such products were approved by the SEC in January, marking a monumental shift in the agency's approach to the crypto space.
Gensler was responding to CNBC's Joe Kernen asking whether the SEC chair was "warming up to top-tier crypto?"
"Where are you on what's called altcoins, there's 15 or 20 thousand of them. Where are you Joe?" Gensler asked.
Gensler refused to reveal a position on what he thought about Donald Trump's idea "to keep the current government holdings "as the core of the strategic national bitcoin stockpile."
"I have a view but given my role and also we are in election season so for the listening public I will stick to my chalk lines which are securities markets and chairman Powell and others can speak to that."
Apart from bitcoin, Gensler has maintained that the vast majority of other tokens fit the legal definition of securities that are rightfully under the SEC's jurisdiction. This position remains despite industry push back, lawsuits against the SEC and a recent hammering the SEC got for two hours during a congressional hearing titled "Dazed and Confused: Breaking Down the SEC’s Politicized Approach to Digital Asset."
Asked by CNBC if the SEC had been regulating by litigation, Gensler once again argued that current laws give his agency the power to oversee the crypto space.
"Not liking the rules is not the same as that there aren't rules.”
Gensler also said that he didn't know where bitcoin will be in 20 years but that that he felt "the field is going to have a challenge building trust" which it is "already" when "there's so many fraudsters, scammers."
"Look at the leading lights in this field, in the crypto field just two years ago. A number of them are in jail right now, and I'm not just talking about SBF... there's been tens of billions of dollars of losses and bankruptcies and so forth," Gensler said on Thursday. "What innovative field in America survives without having building trust in that field and protecting investors or consumers?"
Binance founder Changpeng “CZ” Zhao, who is currently serving a four-month prison sentence, will be a free man by the end of this week.
Read More: SEC’s Crypto Record Rebuked by Ex-Commissioner, GOP Lawmakers in Hearing
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CFTC's Selig opens legal dispute against states getting in way of prediction markets

Commodity Futures Trading Commission Chairman Mike Selig fired a legal warning shot defending his agency's jurisdiction over the event contract space.
Yang perlu diketahui:
- U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission Chairman Mike Selig directed his agency to file an amicus brief declaring his federal agency has authority over the U.S. prediction markets.
- Though the CFTC once fought a legal resistance against such firms as Polymarket and Kalshi, the agency has embraced them during the administration of President Donald Trump, whose son has worked as a paid adviser for the leading companies.
- As Selig defends his agency's jurisdiction in court, he's also pursuing new prediction markets rules for the U.S.












