The Crypto Task Force of the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) held separate meetings with representatives of BlackRock and the Crypto Council for Innovations (CCI) proof of Stake Alliance to discuss regulatory issues (ETPs) with regard to Crypto-Exchange).
According to Memos about the meetings, BlackRock discussed the in-kind repayments for crypto-etps that were traded in the US. At the same time, the CCI included setting ETPs between the topics that were discussed with the regulator.
Changes in Crypto ETPs
Those present of BlackRock include senior representatives of regulatory matters, product technology, ETF capital markets and federal policy.
During his session with the Crypto Task Force, BlackRock presented a document with existing workflows and the role of market participants that support the cash model used in ETPs. The company has also tackled how these systems can apply to potential in kind models for future crypto-based funds.
The SEC members of the Proof of Stake Alliance met separately under the Crypto Council for Innovation.
The group, consisting of representatives of companies such as A16Z, Paradigm, Consensys, Alluvial, Lido Labs Foundation and Marinade, discussed appeals and their implications for crypto ETPs.
The agenda included the assessment of various expansion models, including liquid, retention and delegated non-rights. Participants also presented the principles of the industry intended to inform the regulatory treatment of validator activities and user participation in proof-of-stake networks.
The discussion has also touched on how setting up rewards, validator responsibilities and relationships of service provider factors in the risk profile and the valuation of potential -founding crypto ETPs.
Setting up Crypto ETP offers
The involvement of the SEC in BlackRock and proof of the importance of the importance of the Stake Alliance indicates that the institutional interest in promoting the clarity of the regulations for crypto -financial products.
The discussions follow one Earlier meeting Held on 5 February, in which the Crypto Task Force of the SEC met representatives of Jito Labs and Multicoin Capital to evaluate the potential recording of bets within Crypto ETPs.
Participants, including Jito Labs CEO Lucas Bruder and Multicoin Capital Managing Partner Kyle Samani, argued that setting out is essential for block-of-stake (POS) block chains such as Ethereum and Solana.
They noted that excluding the preparation of ETPs could reduce investor returns and can jeopardize the functional usefulness of POS activa. Jito Labs and Multicoin Capital representatives suggested two models to tackle the worries of the SEC.
The “Services model” makes a partial bet possible via fatal validators while retaining the liquidity for repayments, while the “liquid strike token model” enables ETPs to keep liquid insert tokens.
Although no regulatory results were announced, the meetings are part of the current assessment process of the evaluation of technical and legal frameworks with regard to crypto ETPs.