Blackrock representatives met the US Securities and Exchange Commissions (SEC) Crypto-Task Force on 9 May to ask for guidelines about a series of crypto control stories, including tokenization, deployment and approval frameworks for exchange products (ETPs).
According to the MEMO MEMOBlackRock assessed its digital assets offer, including the Ishares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT), the proposed ISHARES Ethereum Trust (ETHA) and the BlackRock USD Institutional Digital Liquuidity Fund (Budl).
The company made the opportunity to ask input about how current and future products can be regulated under the federal securities laws, in particular as the market for digital assets becomes adults.
The meeting included senior representatives of regulatory matters, legal, digital assets and ETF markets. After an earlier session on April 1, BlackRock is directly involved in the Crypto policy issues.
Last month, the company discussed technical elements of in -kind repayments for crypto ETPs and shared a detailed document about existing workflows under the current cash model.
Moreover, the company outlined how those systems can adapt to support alternative models for crypto-based funds.
Product size and legal ambitions
BlackRock also outlined his views on the recording of strike functions in ETPs, in accordance with other recent industrial proposals assessed by the SEC.
Setting up has become a central issue in continuous discussions about whether expoof-of-stake assets within ETPs can be designed to meet the expectations of the regulations without endangering liquidity or investor protection.
The meeting also discussed the tokenization, where BlackRock asked for feedback about how tokenization efforts can be structured within the existing securities framework. Tokenization is the process of displaying traditional assets in the blockchain as digital tokens.
The company also suggested interim standards for crypto ETP -Emitents and asked the SEC to consider codified guidelines that could apply to broader regulations.
Blackrock also discussed criteria under section 6 (B) of the Exchange Act that can be used to evaluate whether a crypto ETP meets regulatory thresholds for exchange list. These criteria include assessments of market integrity and investor protectors.
Finally, the encounter with the SEC Crypto Task Force Options on Crypto ETPs, with BlackRock who raises technical questions about position and training limits. The company asked clarity about how such limits could be structured with regard to liquidity thresholds for the underlying crypto or ETP shares.