Fund Manager: US Might Have Already Lost Crypto Innovation Race

Brian Kelly is worried that the U.S. has fallen too far behind in the crypto innovation race while we should be taking the lead in it. | Source: CNBC/YouTube
Brian Kelly is worried that the U.S. has fallen too far behind in the crypto innovation race while we should be taking the lead in it. | Source: CNBC/YouTube

As U.S. lawmakers wrestle with what to do with Facebook’s Libra, they are being forced to confront another digital currency that they’ve been trying to avoid like the plague – bitcoin. Unfortunately, the longer lawmakers wait, the more left behind the U.S. becomes as crypto innovation goes elsewhere. Even Facebook chose Switzerland for its Libra coin.

Crypto fund manager Brian Kelly worries that it might already be too late. He pointed out on CNBC that while traveling the world, he can’t help but notice that “other countries are way ahead of the U.S,” saying:

“The U.S. may have already lost the race…It’s very concerning to me. Asia is eating the U.S.’ lunch. The U.S. is the center of finance. We should take the lead in it.”*

He may be right. While the Libra hearings have forced Congress to confront crypto, policymakers clearly haven’t changed their archaic approach to the market. How do they plan on forming a regulatory framework for the industry? By creating more committees and taskforces, of course.

Crypto Committee Overload

CoinShares Chief Strategy Officer Meltem Demirors testified before the U.S. House Financial Services Committee today, where she took it upon herself to help lawmakers differentiate between Facebook’s attempt at a cryptocurrency and bitcoin. She told CNBC:

Read the full story on CCN.com.

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