New Jersey bill would make crypto sold to institutional investors a security

Wednesday, 6 Dec 2023

Cointelegraph by Derek Andersen

Original Article

The bill complements one already on the governor’s desk that regulates digital assets owned by individuals.

1601 Total views
4 Total shares
Listen to article

News

Join us on social networks

The New Jersey General Assembly may consider a bill that would decide when a digital asset or “virtual currency’ is a security under state law. 

All virtual currencies issued and sold to institutional investors would be considered securities in the U.S. state of New Jersey under the bill introduced by Democratic Assemblymember Herb Conaway, Jr. on Nov. 29. According to the short text of the bill, the legislation would supplement the New Jersey Uniform Securities Law, which currently makes no mention of virtual or digital currency or cryptocurrency.

The bill pertains only to institutional investors, which are defined as “a company or organization that invests money on behalf of other people.” It also specifies that stablecoins could be determined to be virtual currencies by the state’s Bureau of Securities.

Related: Coinbase pauses staking services in four US states following regulators’ orders

The bill would only apply to transactions governed by New Jersey law and would not impact the federal Securities and Exchange Commission.

Assemblyman Herb Conaway’s bill classifying virtual currencies. Source: LegiScan

Two other bills are pending in New Jersey that also affect crypto. The Virtual Currency and Blockchain Regulation Act would provide regulation for consumer digital assets and decentralized autonomous organizations. It recently passed both houses of the New Jersey legislature and is currently awaiting action by the governor.

#NewJersey introduces A5747, which would define all #virtualcurrency sold to #institutitonal investors as #securities. h/t to @kkirkbos for spotting this one! /1 https://t.co/f7vnwoentn

— Drew Hinkes (@propelforward)

December 5, 2023

In addition, the Digital Asset and Blockchain Technology Act would require the state Department of Treasury to review and approve a digital payment platform for state-approved businesses “that do not have access to traditional financial services and are forced to operate in cash-only or cash-heavy environments.” The platform would use a virtual currency pegged to the U.S. dollar and would facilitate audits, compliance and local tax payments.

Assemblymember Conaway’s office declined to comment on his bill when approached by Cointelegraph.

Magazine: Crypto regulation: Does SEC Chair Gary Gensler have the final say?

  

Cointelegraph by Derek Andersen

You May Also Like…

Open chat
1
BlockFo Chat
Hello 👋, How can we help you?
You can choose between Telegram or WhatsApp 👍
📱 When you've made your choice, we automatically transfer to the right app 🔝🔐
🖥️ Or, if you use a PC or Mac, then we'll open a new window to load your desktop app.