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Crypto banking rule withdrawal by Fed ‘not real progress’ — Senator Lummis

United States Senator Cynthia Lummis suggests the crypto industry may be celebrating too soon over the US Federal Reserve softening its crypto guidance for banks.

“The Fed withdrawing crypto guidance is just noise, not real progress,” Lummis said in an April 25 X post. Lummis called the Fed’s April 24 announcement — withdrawing its 2022 supervisory letter that had discouraged banks from engaging with crypto and stablecoin activities — “just lip service.”

Lummis’ tone was different from the rest of the crypto industry

Lummis, a pro-crypto advocate known for introducing the Bitcoin (BTC) Strategic Reserve Bill in July 2024, pointed out several flaws in the Fed’s announcement, even as Strategy founder Michael Saylor and crypto entrepreneur Anthony Pompliano suggested it was a step forward for banks and crypto.

Cryptocurrencies, United States
Source: Anthony Pompliano

She argued that the Fed continues to “illegally flout the law on master accounts” and still relies on reputational risk in its bank supervision practices. It comes as the Federal Insurance Deposit Corporation (FDIC) is working on a rule to stop examiners from considering reputational risk when reviewing a bank’s operations, according to a recent Bloomberg report.

Lummis also highlighted the Fed’s policy statement in Section 9(13), which hasn’t been withdrawn, stating that Bitcoin and digital assets are considered “unsafe and unsound.”

She also reiterated many of the same staff behind Operation Chokepoint 2.0 are still involved in crypto policy today.

“We are NOT fooled. The Fed assassinated companies within the industry and hurt American interests by stifling innovation and shuttering businesses. This fight is far from over.”

“I will continue to hold the Fed accountable until the digital asset industry gets more than a life jacket, Chair Powell — they need a fair shake,” Lummis said.

Related: If Trump fired Powell, what would happen to crypto?

Custodia Bank founder and CEO Caitlin Long seemed to share a similar view to Lummis.

“THANK YOU for seeing this for what it is,” Long said.

Cryptocurrencies, United States
Source: David Sacks

However, many crypto executives praised the Fed’s announcement as a positive development for the industry. Saylor said in an April 25 X post that the Fed’s move means that “banks are now free to begin supporting Bitcoin.”

Anastasija Plotnikova, co-founder and CEO of blockchain regulatory firm Fideum, said the Fed’s decision “is a significant development, as it will simplify the path to institutional adoption.”

Magazine: Ethereum is destroying the competition in the $16.1T TradFi tokenization race

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South Korea elects pro-crypto candidate Lee Jae-myung as president

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South Korea elects pro-crypto candidate Lee Jae-myung as president

South Korea elects pro-crypto candidate Lee Jae-myung as president

Lee Jae-myung has plans to enable the state pension fund to invest in crypto, approve Bitcoin ETFs, and launch a Korean won-backed stablecoin.

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California assembly passes bill to allow crypto payments to state

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California assembly passes bill to allow crypto payments to state

California assembly passes bill to allow crypto payments to state

The California State Assembly passed a bill that would allow state agencies to accept crypto for payment in a unanimous 68-0 vote, which will now head to the Senate.

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Rachel Reeves is about to make huge spending decisions – these could be the winners and losers

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Rachel Reeves is about to make huge spending decisions - these could be the winners and losers

A week today, Rachel Reeves presents the spending review; how the budget is divided between government departments between 2026 and 2029 – the bulk of this parliament. 

It’s a foundational moment for this government – and a key to determining the success of this administration.

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So, what’s going to happen?

The chancellor did boost spending significantly in her first year, and this year there was a modest rise.

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However, the uplift to day-to-day spending in the years ahead is more modest – and pared back further in March’s spring statement because of adverse financial conditions.

Plus, where will the £113bn of capital – project – spending go?

So, we’ve done a novel experiment.

We’ve taken Treasury documents, ministerial statements and reports from the Institute for Fiscal Studies.

We put them all into AI – into the deep research function of ChatGPT – and asked it to write the spending review, calculate the winners and losers and work out what goes where, and why.

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It comes with a health warning. We’re using experimental technology that is sometimes wrong, and while ChatGPT can access up-to-date data from across the web, it’s only trained on information up to October 2023.

There are no answers because discussions are still going on. Think of it like a polling projection – clues about the big picture as things move underneath.

But, critically, the story it tells tallies with the narrative I’m hearing from inside government too.

The winners? Defence, health and transport, with Angela Rayner’s housing department up as well.

Everywhere else is down, compared with this year’s spending settlement.

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The Home Office, justice, culture, and business – facing real terms squeezes from here on in.

The aid budget from the Foreign Office, slashed – the Ministry of Defence the beneficiary. You heard about that this week.

Health – a Labour priority. I heard from sources a settlement of around 3%. This AI model puts it just above.

Transport – a surprise winner. Rachel Reeves thinks this is where her capital budget should go. Projects in the north to help hold voters who live there.

But, could this spell trouble?

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Pic: PA
Image:
Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson will not be happy with ChatGPT’s suggestion for her department. Pic: PA

Education – down overall. Now this government will protect the schools budget. It will say ‘per pupil’ funding is up. But adult education is at risk. Is this where they find the savings?

So much else – Home Office down, but is that because asylum costs are going down.

Energy – they’re haggling over solar panels versus home insulation.

Justice should get what it wants, I am told. This isn’t about exact percentages. But you can see across lots of departments – things are tight.

Even though Rachel Reeves has already set the budgets for last year and this, and only needs to decide spending allocations from 2026 onwards, the graphs the Treasury will produce next week compare what will be spent to the last set of Tory plans.

This means their graphs will include the big spending increases they made last year – and flatter them more.

They’ll say that’s fair enough, others will disagree. But in the end, will it be enough for public services?

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