United States cryptocurrency regulations need more clarity on stablecoins and banking relationships before lawmakers prioritize tax reform, according to industry leaders and legal experts.
âIn my view, tax isnât necessarily the priority for upgrading US crypto regulation,â according to Mattan Erder, general counsel at layer-3 decentralized blockchain network Orbs.
A âtailored regulatory approachâ for areas including securities laws and removing âobstacles in bankingâ is a priority for US lawmakers with âmore upsideâ for the industry, Erder told Cointelegraph.
âThe new Trump administration is clearly all in on crypto and is taking steps that we could have only dreamed about a few years ago (including during his first term),â he said. âIt seems likely that crypto regulation will be able to have it all and get much more clear and rational regulation in all areas, including tax.â
Still, Erder noted there are limits to what President Donald Trump can accomplish through executive orders and regulatory agency action alone. âAt some point, the laws themselves will need to change, and for that, he will need Congress,â he said.
Trumpâs March 7 executive order, which directed the government to establish a national Bitcoin reserve using crypto assets seized in criminal cases, was seen as a signal of growing federal support for digital assets.
Related: Trump turned crypto from âoppressed industryâ to âcenterpieceâ of US strategy
Debanking concerns remain
Despite the administrationâs recent pro-crypto moves, industry experts say crypto firms may continue to face difficulties with banking access until at least January 2026.
âItâs premature to say that debanking is over,â as âTrump wonât have the ability to appoint a new Fed governor until January,â Caitlin Long, founder and CEO of Custodia Bank, said during Cointelegraphâs Chainreaction daily X show.
The Crypto Debanking Crisis: #CHAINREACTION https://t.co/nD4qkkzKnB
â Cointelegraph (@Cointelegraph) March 21, 2025
Industry outrage over alleged debanking reached a crescendo when a June 2024 lawsuit spearheaded by ââCoinbase resulted in the release of letters showing US banking regulators asked certain financial institutions to âpauseâ crypto banking activities.
Related: Bitcoin may benefit from US stablecoin dominance push
Stablecoin legislation could unlock new growth
David Pakman, managing partner at crypto investment firm CoinFund, said a stablecoin regulatory framework could encourage more traditional finance institutions to adopt blockchain-based payments.
âSome of the potentially soon-to-pass legislation in the US, like the stablecoin bill, will unlock many of the traditional banks, financial services and payment companies onto crypto rails,â Pakman said during Cointelegraphâs Chainreaction live X show on March 27.
âWe hear this firsthand when we talk to them; they want to use crypto rails as a lower-cost, transparent, 24/7, and no middleman-dependent network for transferring money.â
The comments come as the industry awaits progress on US stablecoin legislation, which may come as soon as in the next two months, according to Bo Hines, the executive director of the presidentâs Council of Advisers on Digital Assets.
The GENIUS Act, an acronym for Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for US Stablecoins, would establish collateralization guidelines for stablecoin issuers while requiring full compliance with Anti-Money Laundering laws.
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