Global Cryptocurrency Regulation Race: The U.S. Can't Just Be a Referee
From the EU's MiCA to licensing systems in various Asian countries, the world has entered a stage of "regulatory investment attraction." Those who can provide a clear, stable, and predictable framework will attract projects, talent, and capital. The White House summit, to some extent, is also a response by the U.S. to this competition. If the U.S. continues to have fragmented regulation, project teams will naturally vote with their feet and move to jurisdictions with more friendly regulation. The migration cost for blockchain companies is far lower than for traditional financial institutions; a single line of code can enable global deployment. This turns the regulatory game into a global competition rather than a unilateral command. The underlying message of the summit is: the U.S. does not want to miss out on the voice of the next-generation financial infrastructure. Stablecoins, on-chain clearing, and tokenized assets could all influence the future landscape of the financial system. Regulatory frameworks are actually part of a geopolitical financial strategy. However, the key to success still lies in execution—whether cross-agency coordination is efficient, whether legislation keeps pace with technological iterations, and whether law enforcement maintains consistency. Otherwise, there is a risk of a "friendly on paper, strictly enforced in practice" contrast. In summary, this summit is not just an industry meeting but more like a route choice: whether to treat crypto as a risk source to manage or as an industry opportunity to cultivate. Different directions lead to vastly different outcomes. #白宫加密会议
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Global Cryptocurrency Regulation Race: The U.S. Can't Just Be a Referee
From the EU's MiCA to licensing systems in various Asian countries, the world has entered a stage of "regulatory investment attraction." Those who can provide a clear, stable, and predictable framework will attract projects, talent, and capital. The White House summit, to some extent, is also a response by the U.S. to this competition.
If the U.S. continues to have fragmented regulation, project teams will naturally vote with their feet and move to jurisdictions with more friendly regulation. The migration cost for blockchain companies is far lower than for traditional financial institutions; a single line of code can enable global deployment. This turns the regulatory game into a global competition rather than a unilateral command.
The underlying message of the summit is: the U.S. does not want to miss out on the voice of the next-generation financial infrastructure. Stablecoins, on-chain clearing, and tokenized assets could all influence the future landscape of the financial system. Regulatory frameworks are actually part of a geopolitical financial strategy.
However, the key to success still lies in execution—whether cross-agency coordination is efficient, whether legislation keeps pace with technological iterations, and whether law enforcement maintains consistency. Otherwise, there is a risk of a "friendly on paper, strictly enforced in practice" contrast.
In summary, this summit is not just an industry meeting but more like a route choice: whether to treat crypto as a risk source to manage or as an industry opportunity to cultivate. Different directions lead to vastly different outcomes.
#白宫加密会议