Gary Gensler, the chair of the United States Securities and Exchange Commission, believes staff at its agency could benefit from greater use of artificial intelligence.
During a July 17 speech before the National Press Club, where he later broke his silence about the recent Ripple court ruling, Gensler listed several potential use cases of AI that could assist the regulator in its role as securities watchdog.
“We at the SEC also could benefit from staff making greater use of AI in their market surveillance, disclosure review, exams, enforcement, and economic analysis,” he said.
SEC Chair Gensler speaking before the National Press Club on July 17. Source: SEC
The SEC has hit up at least 54 cryptocurrency firms with enforcement actions between 2018 and the first half of 2023. The collapse of FTX in November was followed by a dramatic increase in the rate of these actions.
While Gensler didn’t provide more detail on how the agency could use AI, the SEC Chair spoke highly of the technology and the positive impact that it can have on humanity on financial markets:
“AI opens up tremendous opportunities for humanity, from healthcare to science to finance. As machines take on pattern recognition, particularly when done at scale, this can create great efficiencies across the economy.”
“I believe it’s the most transformative technology of our time, on par with the internet and mass production of automobiles,” Gensler added.
Issues with AI still linger, says Gensler
Despite the overall positive sentiment, Gensler highlighted that many AI systems are filled with bias and deception, infringe on privacy rights and present several conflicts of interest.
On the issue of bias, Gensler said some predictive AI models reflect historical biases which makes the system less accurate and in some cases, lead to an entirely false prediction.
Gensler highlighted that he was even a victim of misinformation when a fake AI-generated text of his resignation began circulating on the internet.
Gensler added that conflicts of interest could arise when AI systems are trained to take into account the interests of the company as opposed to the interests of the customer. He added:
“That’s why I’ve asked SEC staff to make recommendations for rule proposals for the Commission’s consideration regarding how best to address such potential conflicts across the range of investor interactions.”
He also believes the emergence of a few AI monopolies may shake up the economy and potentially play a role in a “future financial crisis.”
Read my full remarks from @PressClubDC‘s Headliners Luncheon:
In a follow up interview with Yahoo Finance on July 17, Gensler said that the regulator will enforce action against culprits who use AI to defraud investors:
“Fraud is fraud. If a bad actor uses artificial intelligence to try to deceive the public, we’re authorized but also mandated by Congress to go after that,” he said.
“AI is already very much embedded in our capital markets,” SEC Chair @GaryGensler says, later adding: “These are rapidly changing times.” pic.twitter.com/i0xuBNO2WE
Cryptocurrency scammers have impersonated Australian police and exploited government infrastructure to pressure victims into handing over their digital assets, the Australian Federal Police (AFP) said Thursday.
The AFP said scammers used the local cybercrime reporting tool ReportCyber to submit reports about their targets. At a later time, they contact the victims posing as police and inviting them to check the report on government websites, lending credibility to the scammers.
In one case, the scammers warned the victim that they would be contacted by a representative from a crypto company, who would also provide information to prove their legitimacy. This second caller then attempted to persuade the target to transfer money from their platform wallet to a wallet of their choice.
“Thankfully the target became suspicious and hung up,“ the AFP said.
AFP Detective Superintendent Marie Andersson said the scammers falsely claimed that an individual had been arrested and the victim identified in an investigation involving a crypto breach. She noted that the scammers’ verification steps often resembled legitimate law-enforcement procedures, making the scheme “highly convincing” to some victims.
Andersson said this was part of a broader trend in scams becoming increasingly sophisticated. She encouraged “Australians to adopt necessary safety measures online” and warned that “if you’re contacted by someone about a ReportCyber report you didn’t lodge or authorise someone to make on your behalf, terminate the call and notify ReportCyber.
“Also bear in mind legitimate law enforcement officials will never request access to your cryptocurrency accounts, wallets, bank accounts, cryptocurrency wallet seed phrases, or any personal information relating to your financial accounts.”
In late October, the AFP announced that it had cracked a coded cryptocurrency wallet backup containing 9 million Australian dollars ($5.9 million) — suspected to be the proceeds of a crime.
In late August, Australia’s markets regulator was reported to be expanding its campaign against online scams, having taken down 14,000 since July 2023, with over 3,000 involving cryptocurrency.
In July, authorities in the Australian island state of Tasmania found that the top 15 users of crypto ATMs in the state were all victims of scams, with combined losses of $1.6 million.
Taiwan is preparing to issue a report on its Bitcoin holdings, signaling that officials are weighing whether the country should follow the United States in creating a national Bitcoin reserve.
Zhuo Rongtai, premier of the Republic of China (Taiwan), said the country is preparing a report to assess the total amount of Bitcoin (BTC) confiscated by domestic agencies.
The report will be issued before the end of the year, said Rongtai during a legislative general fiscal inquiry meeting with the Finance Committee on Tuesday.
When asked about the fate of the confiscated Bitcoin, legislator Ge Rujun proposed that Taiwan’s government “hold it unchanged” before deciding whether to liquidate the assets or include them in a strategic reserve, according to local media outlet Blocktempo.
Rongtai’s forthcoming report will also include a list of “pros and cons” for creating a strategic Bitcoin reserve, marking the first time Taiwanese officials have publicly considered BTC as a reserve asset.
The premier’s pledge to “study” Bitcoin for a strategic reserve asset and draft more Bitcoin-friendly regulations in the next six months is a “breakthrough” for the country, wrote Ko Ju-Chun, a lawmaker in Taiwan’s unicameral legislature, the Legislative Yuan, in a Tuesday X post.
Governmental interest in Bitcoin started rising after March 7, when US President Donald Trump signed an executive order outlining a plan to create a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve, initially using cryptocurrency forfeited in government criminal cases, Cointelegraph reported.
The Bitcoin reserve marked the “first real step toward integrating Bitcoin into the fabric of global finance, acknowledging its role as a foundational asset for a more stable and sound monetary system,” said Joe Burnett, head of market research at Unchained, at the time.
Taiwan legislators are calling for a Bitcoin reserve as a hedge against global uncertainty
While Taiwan has yet to make an official move, lawmakers have previously called for the creation of a Bitcoin reserve.
In May, Ju-Chun called for the government to consider adding Bitcoin to its national reserve, citing Bitcoin’s potential to serve as a hedge amid global economic uncertainty, during a speech to the Taiwanese government at the National Conference on May 9.
Ko Ju-Chun advocated for the adoption of Bitcoin by the Taiwanese government before the Legislative Yuan. Source: Ko Ju-Chun
The lawmaker previously suggested a maximum allocation of 5% of Taiwan’s $50 billion reserve.
Taiwan has been exploring more crypto-friendly regulations to bolster institutional cryptocurrency adoption. In October 2024, the Financial Supervisory Commission (FSC) of Taiwan announced the launch of a trial for crypto custody services for financial institutions.
The crypto community is bracing for the launch of the first spot XRP exchange-traded fund (ETF) after Nasdaq certified the listing of Canary Capital’s XRP ETF.
The Nasdaq Stock Market exchange on Wednesday officially notified the US Securities and Exchange Commission that it has received the Form 8‑A filing for the Canary XRP ETF (XRPC).
“The official listing notice for XRPC has arrived from Nasdaq,” Bloomberg’s senior ETF analyst Eric Balchunas wrote on X, adding: “Looks like tomorrow is on for the launch.”
While ETF watchers expect Canary’s spot XRP (XRP) ETF to debut trading on Thursday, the SEC has yet to issue its final approval for trading to commence, leaving the debut uncertain heading into the market open.
The sixth single crypto asset ETF
Nate Geraci, president of NovaDius Wealth Management, took to X on Thursday to report that Canary had launched its website for the Canary XRP ETF, highlighting the likely soon-to-come trading launch.
“Canary Capital will be first to market,” Geraci said, adding that its XRP ETF would be the sixth single crypto asset in the ETF wrapper after Bitcoin (BTC), Ether (ETH), Solana (SOL), Litecoin (LTC) and Hedera (HBAR).
Source: Eric Balchunas
Other industry observers, including Crypto America’s Eleanor Terrett, shared optimism on X, noting that Nasdaq had “cleared XRPC for launch at market open” on Thursday, but some cautioned that the exchange’s letter was procedural and does not authorize trading.
“The Nasdaq letter itself does not say the ETF is effective — it only says Nasdaq approved the listing and joined the registrant’s request for SEC effectiveness,” one commentator wrote, adding that the certification is a “routine procedural letter, not confirmation that trading will start.”
With trading going live on Oct. 28, some ETF observers have suggested that these new crypto funds relied on “automatic effectiveness” provisions during the government shutdown.