United States Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler spoke at a meeting of the commission’s Investor Advisory Committee on March 2 on the topic of asset custody. The committee has a proposed rule for investment advisers on safeguarding investor assets. It was the second statement Gensler has made on the proposed rule. The first was in mid-February when the rule was first proposed.
The current custody rule, dating to 2009, covers “a significant amount of crypto assets” and was designed to reduce the risk of advisers embarking on Ponzi schemes. The new rule expands safeguards to all asset classes, including crypto assets that are not funds or securities, and would enhance protections provided by qualified custodians in light of new authorities granted by Congress in 2010, Gensler said.
The proposed rule would also require written agreements between advisers and custodians, add requirements for foreign institutions serving as custodians and explicitly extend the safeguard rules to discretionary trading.
Related: Galaxy acquires institutional crypto custody firm for $44M
Investment advisers, he continued, cannot rely on crypto platforms to perform custodial functions. Gensler added:
To be a “qualified” custodian under the new rule, a firm would need to ensure that all assets are properly segregated, submit to annual audits from public accountants and undertake other transparency measures.
#BREAKING: US SEC Chair Gary Gensler says crypto exchanges are not qualified custodians for investors assets.⚠️ Says they can't be relied upon & must be highly scrutinized.Calls for Congress to grant change to custody rule. pic.twitter.com/tZ8zNSGkDS
SEC commissioner Hester Peirce opposed the rule. She argued in a statement
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