In the wave of global digital asset globalization, regulatory agencies in various countries are accelerating their布局, launching multiple Crypto Bills in an effort to seek a balance between promoting innovation and maintaining security.
Major financial centers such as the United States and Hong Kong have issued key legislation. The United States has centered its efforts around the GENIUS Act, along with the Clarity Act and the Anti-CBDC Surveillance State Act, to collectively establish a regulatory framework for stablecoins and digital commodities; Hong Kong implemented new regulations on August 1, requiring stablecoin issuers to conduct strict identity verification for all users.
Multiple U.S. bills focus on the issuance of stablecoins, compliance audits, and entity regulation. The GENIUS Act emphasizes a one-to-one reserve support, the Clarity Act extends to tokenized assets, and the banking regulator opposes central bank digital currency being issued directly to individuals.
The new regulations from the Hong Kong Monetary Authority cover identity verification for holders (KYC), recipients of cross-border payments, and users of anonymous wallets, aiming to combat money laundering and terrorist financing, but also raising concerns within the industry about privacy and user thresholds.
After the legislative news was released, Bitcoin briefly pulled back to around $118,500, then quickly stabilized and climbed under the expectation of the system; mainstream stablecoins such as USDT and USDC saw a slight rebound in market capitalization under compliance expectations, with the total market capitalization returning to over $4 trillion.
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