The United States Securities and Exchange Commission is not the appropriate agency to regulate stablecoins, according to Circle founder and CEO Jeremy Allaire.
In an interview with Bloomberg on Feb. 24, the Circle chief executive aired his views on the SEC and its recent moves to clamp down on the crypto industry, including stablecoin issuer Paxos.
Allaire appears to have taken issue with the SEC's focus on stablecoins, arguing that dollar-pegged “payment stablecoins” should be under the oversight of a banking regulator, rather than the SEC.
“I don’t think the SEC is the regulator for stablecoins,” said Allaire, adding:
Circle confirmed last week that it had not been targeted by the SEC following the issuance of a Wells notice to Binance USD (BUSD)-issuer Paxos.
“There are lots of flavors, as we like to say, not all stablecoins are created equal,” Allaire said, adding, “But, clearly, from a policy perspective, the uniform view around the world is this is a payment system, prudential regulator space.”
Circle's Jeremy Allaire says banking regulators would be better for overseeing stablecoins than the SEC https://t.co/8nibUU4taW
The Circle CEO however said that he was generally in favor of a recent SEC proposal on crypto custody that would make it much harder for exchanges to become custodians.
Circle is the issuer of the world’s second-largest stablecoin, USD Coin (USDC). It has a circulating supply of $42.2 billion which gives it a market share of 31%. Tether remains the dominant stablecoin with a supply of $70.6 billion and a market share of 52%, according to CoinGecko.
Related: Why the SEC wants to ban crypto staking and stablecoins under scrutiny
On Feb. 23, Allaire agreed with SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce, who said
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