JAV senatoriai prašo banko reguliuotojų „peržiūrėti“ „SoFi“ kriptovaliutų sąrašus

U.S. senators Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio), Jack Reed (D-R.I.), Chris Van Holland (D-Md.) and Tina Smith (D-Minn.) wrote open letters to digital finance company SoFi and several bank regulators, asking for a “review” of SoFi’s crypto offerings.

Šios letter to SoFi expressed concerns about the company expanding its crypto business, how it holds customers’ cryptos and its listing of dogecoin (DOGE), which dienoraštyje on the company’s website cited as an example of a “pump and dump” coin.

The lawmakers asked SoFi to explain how it lists cryptocurrencies for sale, how it addresses customer complaints and how it determines “the appropriate credit, market and operational risk capital requirements for digital asset exposures.”

The letter to the company also asked if SoFi lists any cryptocurrencies that are securities, and, if so, whether it’s licensed to offer securities.

A separate letter addressed to Federal Reserve Vice Chair for Supervision Michael Barr, Acting Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Chair Martin Gruenberg and Acting Comptroller of the Currency Michael Hsu said SoFi “committed not to ‘expand [its] impermissible activities'” but that the company “has apparently expanded its digital asset retail operations.”

„SoFi skaitmeninio turto veikla kelia didelę riziką tiek individualiems investuotojams, tiek saugumui ir patikimumui. Kaip matėme kriptovaliutų žlugimo metu šią vasarą, kai kriptovaliutų turtas per kelias savaites prarado daugiau nei 1 trilijoną USD vertės, užkratas bankų sistemoje buvo apribotas dėl reguliavimo apsaugų“, – sakoma laiške. „Jei „SoFi Digital Assets“ atsiduria su kriptovaliuta susijusių pozicijų, jos patronuojančiai bendrovei, banko kontroliuojančiajai bendrovei ar susijusiam nacionaliniam bankui reikia skubios likvidumo ar kitos finansinės pagalbos iš Federalinio rezervo arba FDIC, mokesčių mokėtojai gali būti ant kabliuko.

In a statement, a SoFi spokesperson said the company allows its members to buy and sell cryptocurrencies but does not provide any other type of crypto-related financing activity.

“SoFi takes our regulatory and compliance commitments seriously, including our non-bank operations within the digital assets space,” the spokesperson said. “We believe we have been fully compliant with the mandates of our bank license and all applicable laws. Additionally, we maintain consistent, constructive dialogue with each of our regulators. Cryptocurrency remains a non-material component of our business. We look forward to sharing the requested information with the senators in a timely fashion.”

The spokesperson also said SoFi had no exposure to FTX, the FTT token, Alameda Research or Genesis Global Trading. (Genesis shares a parent company with CoinDesk, Digital Currency Group.)

Source: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/us-senators-ask-bank-regulators-204926179.html