Crypto Regulatory Vacuum Ends as Michael Selig, Travis Hill Assume CFTC and FDIC Posts

The Senate has locked in permanent leadership across two of crypto’s most critical watchdogs. In a 53-43 vote during the opening phase of Trump’s second administration, lawmakers bundled Michael Selig and Travis Hill among dozens of nominees through a consolidated resolution, sidestepping the traditional case-by-case confirmation process. The move fills leadership gaps that stretched through much of the year at agencies shaping how digital assets integrate into the financial system.

Michael Selig Inherits Expanded Mandate at CFTC

Michael Selig replaces Caroline Pham at the CFTC, who departs to join MoonPay as chief legal officer. During her interim tenure, Pham planted seeds for broader crypto jurisdiction—launching internal “modernization sprints” that wove blockchain language into regulatory frameworks and explored stablecoins as eligible collateral in tokenized structures. She also greenlit platforms like Bitnomial to pilot spot leveraged crypto products.

Now Selig takes the reins at a pivotal moment. Congress remains in active negotiations over legislation granting the CFTC explicit spot market authority. The House already passed such a bill; the Senate Banking Committee may yet hold a markup before year-end. Selig arrives with prior SEC experience, having served as chief counsel to the SEC’s Crypto Task Force, positioning him at the intersection of evolving regulatory jurisdictions between derivatives and securities.

One wrinkle: the CFTC’s five-member commission has eroded to a single sitting commissioner. Once Pham leaves, Selig operates as the sole member temporarily—a structure that may accelerate policy work but could invite procedural challenges as the agency’s authority potentially expands through legislation.

Travis Hill Signals Banking Sector Openness to Crypto

At the FDIC, Travis Hill formalizes shifts already rolling under his acting role. He publicly walked back prior restrictions preventing banks from serving crypto firms without supervisory preapproval. In December congressional testimony, Hill acknowledged that regulators had previously gated crypto market entry; that gatekeeping now dissolves under his watch. Banks manage crypto-related risks independently going forward.

This pivot carries weight. The FDIC regulates stablecoin issuers and shapes how crypto companies access insured banking services. By reversing “debanking” pressure and reviewing Biden-era brokered deposit restrictions, Hill signals that the agency deprioritizes the aggressive stance that severed relationships between traditional finance and digital assets over recent years.

Two Agencies, One Direction

The confirmations reflect a cohesive regulatory philosophy reshaping crypto oversight. Michael Selig and Travis Hill arrive as Congress advances legislation redefining federal digital asset authority. With permanent leadership installed at both the CFTC and FDIC, the concurrent policy work—spot market expansion, stablecoin integration, banking access—now proceeds under unified direction rather than interim improvisation.

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