Implications of Delays in U.S. Crypto Market Structure Legislation for Institutional Investors

Generado por agente de IALiam AlfordRevisado porTianhao Xu
lunes, 5 de enero de 2026, 9:03 pm ET2 min de lectura

The U.S. crypto market structure legislation, a cornerstone of regulatory clarity for institutional investors, faces significant delays, with final rules potentially

due to political and procedural hurdles. This prolonged uncertainty has forced institutional investors to recalibrate their strategies, balancing risk mitigation with opportunistic positioning in a rapidly evolving asset class. As the Senate remains a bottleneck-requiring 60 votes to overcome a filibuster- in crypto markets are profound.

Prolonged Uncertainty and Strategic Adaptation

The delay in passing comprehensive legislation has created a regulatory vacuum, compelling institutions to adopt a dual approach: leveraging existing clarity while hedging against potential shifts. For instance,

and the enactment of the GENIUS Act in 2025 provided banks and custodians with clearer guidelines to engage with stablecoins and digital assets. These changes have already , with over 71% of traditional hedge funds planning to increase their crypto allocations in the coming year. However, the absence of a unified framework for tokenized assets, DeFi, and market structure remains a constraint.

Goldman Sachs has emphasized that regulatory reform, including the stalled market structure bill, is critical for unlocking innovation in tokenization and decentralized finance (DeFi). Without clarity on the roles of the SEC and CFTC, institutions face ambiguity in compliance and risk management, particularly for novel products like tokenized real-world assets (RWAs) and decentralized protocols. This uncertainty has led to a cautious but strategic shift: 80% of institutional investors now view

as a viable treasury reserve, while 70% argue that holding cash instead of Bitcoin carries a high opportunity cost over five years.

Diversification as a Core Strategy

Institutional investors are increasingly treating crypto as a core diversification tool rather than a speculative overlay.

that 60% of investors plan to increase their digital asset allocations, with Bitcoin and stablecoins forming the backbone of these strategies. The creation of the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve and the approval of regulated products like spot BTC ETFs-now managing over $191 billion in assets under management-have further solidified crypto's role in institutional portfolios.

Regulatory clarity has also enabled the tokenization of traditional assets, such as gold and U.S. Treasuries, with tokenized money market funds exceeding $8 billion in AUM. This trend is supported by jurisdictions like Singapore and the U.S., which allow experimentation under defined guardrails. However, the lack of a federal framework for tokenized RWAs and DeFi projects means institutions must navigate a patchwork of state and international regulations, increasing operational complexity.

Risk Mitigation and Compliance Frameworks

To navigate regulatory ambiguity, institutions are adopting robust compliance frameworks tailored to crypto's unique risks. For example,

and the U.S. GENIUS Act have provided foundational clarity for stablecoins, enabling institutions to expand custody, trading, and issuance activities. Nonetheless, challenges persist in areas like anti-money laundering (AML) and counter-terrorist financing (CFT), with as their primary barrier to entry.

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Liam Alford

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