From SEC Chair Gary Gensler Talks AI and Crypto | Bloomberg Talks · · Bloomberg Podcasts
“There's nothing incompatible about a ledger technology, decentralized ledger technology and the Securities laws. And it's important that in the Securities markets that investors get to decide on their Investments but they get the proper disclosure that we guard against conflicts of interest and the like. And we're going to continue to do that at the Securities and Exchange Commission. If a Market's ever going to have trust it also needs to come into compliance.”
On , Gary Gensler, Chairman at SEC, spoke about crypto regulation during SEC Chair Gary Gensler Talks AI and Crypto | Bloomberg Talks on Bloomberg Podcasts.
Gary Gensler, the former chair of both the SEC and CFTC who now teaches at MIT and co-hosts the podcast "Power and Consequences," has been a frequent commentator on securities regulation, prediction markets, and artificial intelligence. He criticized an SEC proposal to move from quarterly to semi-annual earnings reporting, calling it "a solution in search of a problem" and arguing that transparency is important for capital markets. Gensler also discussed the AI boom, noting that the U.S. is spending roughly $750 billion on AI infrastructure while native AI revenues are around $100-150 billion, and said it is "plausible we'll have that reckoning at some point in time." On prediction markets, Gensler has argued that Congress should prohibit government officials and their families from trading on such platforms, stating "it's too hard to police this and to enforce it rigorously." He expressed opposition to President Trump's call for the CFTC to have exclusive authority over prediction markets, saying the agency is smaller than it was 15 years ago and lacks the capacity to regulate what he described as gaming and betting contracts. Gensler has also called for bans on contracts related to assassination, war, and terrorism, and noted that the CFTC under his leadership voted unanimously in 2012 to prohibit such agreements.