US FHFA to Study Crypto for Mortgage Qualifications: Big Steps Ahead?

TheCryptoTimesPublicado em 2025-06-24Última atualização em 2025-06-24

The Director of the U.S. Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), Bill Pulte, has unveiled a groundbreaking initiative today with him announcing that the agency will be studying the role of cryptocurrency holdings in qualifying for mortgages. 

While the plan has potential to reshape the landscape of housing finance, the initiative has sparked widespread interest and debate among experts, crypto enthusiasts, and policymakers.

Replying to Pulte’s X post, the CEO of Strategy (MicroStrategy), Michael Saylor has offered the company’s BTC Credit model to support this shift. This celebrated model amounts in loan duration, collateral coverage, volatility, and other aspects to calculate rating, risk and credit for Bitcoin. 

Another user noted that the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act of 2025 (H.R. 3633) already mandates that crypto assets be treated as legitimate collateral under federal lending guidelines. However, it prohibits discrimination against digital commodities in mortgage underwriting. 

“While innovation is critical, the real risk lies in D.C. bureaucrats layering redundant “risk assessments” that duplicate existing fraud safeguards,” noted the user, adding “the market’s adapting faster than regulators—let’s streamline, not suffocate progress with more studies.”

Through critics warn the Director of a potential housing bubble akin to the 2008 crisis, when Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s subprime loan exposure necessitated a government bailout. As no peer-reviewed data currently supports this fear with crypto-backed mortgages, the historical parallel fuels caution.

Also read: Fed Drops ‘Reputational Risk’ Checks, Is it Good for Crypto?



Leituras Relacionadas

Securitize Drops 40% in First Week of Trading as Tokenization Industry Enters Patent Wars

The article discusses the recent stock performance of Securitize (NYSE: SECZ) and a looming patent war in the tokenization industry. Securitize, a leading tokenization platform and transfer agent for BlackRock's BUIDL fund, debuted on the NYSE via a SPAC merger on July 2. After an initial rise, its stock plummeted nearly 40% within a week, closing at $8.06 on July 7. Analysts attribute the sharp decline largely to typical post-SPAC investor turnover and broader pressure on crypto-related stocks, rather than fundamental business deterioration. Concurrently, Securitize faces significant legal challenges. On June 15, infrastructure rival tZERO accused Securitize of patent infringement concerning its core DS Protocol and Vault Registrar products. Securitize preemptively filed a lawsuit on June 22 seeking a declaratory judgment of non-infringement. tZERO, holding 105 patents, has indicated it has identified at least six other market participants for potential infringement actions, signaling a broader industry-wide patent conflict. A separate lawsuit was also filed by Liquid Rarity Exchange. The article concludes that while Securitize's stock drop may be a temporary SPAC-related correction, the patent disputes initiated by tZERO represent a more profound, long-term risk for the entire tokenization sector, potentially shifting competitive dynamics from business execution to intellectual property litigation.

Foresight NewsHá 20m

Securitize Drops 40% in First Week of Trading as Tokenization Industry Enters Patent Wars

Foresight NewsHá 20m

HKEX Welcomes Its Largest IPO of the Day

Today (July 8th), Momenta successfully listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, becoming the "first Physical AI stock." The company, founded in 2016 by Tsinghua University alumnus Cao Xudong, focuses on autonomous driving as an entry point into Physical AI research. Momenta's IPO price was HK$295.6 per share. With a market cap exceeding HK$70 billion post-listing, it was the largest among the five companies debuting that day. The offering raised approximately HK$6.8 billion and attracted a "star-studded" lineup of 14 cornerstone investors, including top-tier international funds, leading strategic industrial investors like Mercedes-Benz and BYD, and major Chinese financial institutions. The company has pioneered a "flywheel" strategy, integrating mass-produced advanced driver-assistance systems (ADAS) with its full-self-driving (L4) development. Data from over 1 million vehicles equipped with its systems fuels its AI models, enabling continuous improvement. This massive real-world data scale is a core competitive advantage. In April, Momenta launched its self-developed R7 World Model for mass production, a foundational model designed to understand and predict physical world dynamics. The company positions itself not just as an automotive tech supplier, but as a platform-level Physical AI company. Its technology platform has the potential to expand beyond autonomous vehicles into areas like logistics and embodied AI. Financially, Momenta's revenue grew from RMB 743 million in 2023 to RMB 2.413 billion in 2025, with licensing income surging 42-fold during this period. While still reporting adjusted losses, it is nearing breakeven. The company boasts partnerships with 24 global automakers, including 9 of the world's top 10, and holds a 65% market share in China's third-party urban NOA segment. The listing marks a significant moment for Physical AI in global capital markets, reflecting strong investor confidence in Momenta's unique technology path and commercial execution.

marsbitHá 37m

HKEX Welcomes Its Largest IPO of the Day

marsbitHá 37m

Trading

Spot
活动图片