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Andreessen Crypto Policy Lead Quintenz in Running for CFTC Chair

(Bloomberg) -- Brian Quintenz has emerged as a top contender to lead the Commodity Futures Trading Commission on what could be a dramatic shift in crypto regulation under President-elect Donald Trump.Most Read from BloombergBrace for a Nationwide Shuffle of Corporate HeadquartersHong Kong's Expat Party Hub Reshaped by Chinese InfluxAmerican Institute of Architects CEO ResignsCity Hall Is HiringCloud Computing Tax Threatens Chicago’s Silicon Valley DreamQuintenz, a former Republican CFTC commissi

Why Altcoins Were Zooming Higher on Wednesday

Market-boosting catalysts, from the introduction of spot exchange-traded funds (ETFs) to a presidential election that delivered a crypto-friendly administration to the White House, seemed to occur every few weeks. Shiba Inu (CRYPTO: SHIB), a meme crypto whose developers are pushing hard for respectability, advanced by just under 9%, while Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) fork Bitcoin Cash (CRYPTO: BCH) was trading nearly 6% higher. Speaking of Bitcoin, the leading cryptocurrency was at the heart of this latest rally.

US bankers cautious on crypto despite expected regulatory easing

U.S. bankers struck a cautious tone on cryptocurrencies at the Reuters NEXT conference in New York this week, despite expectations that friendlier rules under President-elect Donald Trump will pave the way for lenders to expand into digital assets. Trump courted crypto campaign dollars with promises to be a "crypto president" and end the Biden administration's crackdown on the sector, but banks are nevertheless unlikely to rush head-first into the volatile asset, bankers said. "The regulatory framework has to evolve ... and everyone's speculating as to how that regulatory framework will evolve, but it's still unclear," said Goldman Sachs Chief Executive David Solomon.