The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, or CFTC, has released its Fiscal Year 2023 (FY2023) budget request, seeking $365 million. This marks a 9.9% increase over the previous year and 20% over FY2021. The commission regulates the country’s derivatives market and has been increasingly active in recent years in policing financial products that incorporate cryptocurrencies.
According to the agency’s request document, the CTFC focuses on digital asset custodian risk, ensuring secure storage, as well as on accounting. The agency has its own staff of certified public due to the lack of guidance on digital asset accounting from sectoral oversight bodies. In addition, the agency ensures derivative clearing organizations “employ strong segregation of duty processes and procedures to safeguard against theft of the collateral from [their] employees,” and it has extensive plans to increase educational efforts.
The request was more modest than commissioner Rostin Behnam had been angling for. He told the Senate Agriculture Committee in February that his agency needed an additional $100 million and additional authorities to regulate Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH), the cryptocurrencies the government treats as commodities.
The CFTC now depends heavily on whistleblowers in its enforcement efforts. Behnam told a Futures Industry Association audience this month that the agency had received over 600 tips since October, of which “a large number allege cryptocurrency fraud, such as pump-and-dump schemes, refusals to honor requests to withdraw money, and romance scams.” The agency announced a $10 million whistleblower award March 18.
It seems likely the agency will receive more authorities in the arena of digital assets. Senators
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