Crypto Reckoning? US Banks Urge Stricter AML And Sanctions Rules–Industry Pushes Back

bitcoinist2026-04-25 tarihinde yayınlandı2026-04-25 tarihinde güncellendi

Özet

A renewed push by the Bank Policy Institute (BPI) to tighten anti-money laundering (AML) and sanctions rules for cryptocurrencies has sparked debate between traditional banks and crypto advocates. BPI argues that crypto is increasingly used for illicit activities, citing data that illicit addresses received $154 billion in 2025. They call for Congress to impose bank-like compliance obligations on crypto firms to ensure fairness and protect national security. In response, Coinbase’s Chief Policy Officer Faryad Shirzad criticized BPI’s framing, noting that illicit activity represents less than 1.2% of total crypto volume—comparable to or lower than the estimated 2–5% of global GDP laundered through traditional finance. While acknowledging the need for regulation, Shirzad emphasized that crypto industry participants already invest in AML efforts and sanctions screening, and rejected the narrative that crypto is dominated by criminal use.

A renewed push to tighten anti–money laundering (AML) and sanctions requirements in the United States has sparked a fresh debate between traditional banking advocates and crypto policy leaders.

The latest round of attention comes from the Washington, DC-based Bank Policy Institute (BPI), which released a new report titled “Time for a Reckoning on AML and Crypto.”

BPI Calls For US AML And Sanctions Overhaul

In the document, the BPI argues that cryptocurrencies and stablecoins are being used more often by money launderers and terrorist financiers, and it claims that, unlike banks, crypto businesses do not face equivalent legal obligations to safeguard the financial system from abuse.

BPI says Congress now has an opportunity to correct that imbalance through market structure legislation, framing the issue as tied not only to financial integrity but also to US national security.

BPI’s case relies heavily on data it says highlights how illicit activity involving crypto continues to grow. The institute cites Chainalysis’s 2026 Annual Report, saying that illicit crypto addresses received $154 billion in 2025—an increase of 162% year-over-year.

The report further claims that crypto “is funding serious crimes,” stating that the intersection of cryptocurrency and suspected human trafficking intensified in 2025, with total transaction volume reaching “hundreds of millions of dollars across identified services,” which BPI describes as an 85% year-over-year increase.

At the same time, BPI says regulators are already moving toward more comparable obligations, pointing to what it describes as Treasury’s recent Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on AML and sanctions obligations for stablecoin issuers.

BPI interprets the proposed approach as establishing stablecoin-related responsibilities similar to those applicable to banks, and it argues that a comparable model should extend to other crypto intermediaries.

BPI’s overall conclusion is that the US should not treat compliance as a competitive advantage for some firms over others. Instead, it argues, market participants should share the same baseline obligations so illicit activity does not exploit differences in legal coverage.

Crypto AML Debate Heats Up

The report drew an immediate response from crypto leadership. Coinbase’s Chief Policy Officer, Faryad Shirzad, criticized what he called the framing of the BPI report, saying that the “reckoning” should be broader and that the BPI’s narrative leans too heavily on a single headline figure.

Shirzad pointed out that BPI leads with Chainalysis’s $154 billion illicit figure for 2025, but he said the same Chainalysis report concludes that illicit activity remains under 1% of total on-chain volume.

He added that TRM Labs estimates the figure at 1.2%, and both firms, according to Shirzad, note that the illicit share has stayed at or below those levels for years. In his view, the numbers do not support a framing that implies crypto is uniquely or overwhelmingly dominated by criminal use.

Shirzad also broadened the comparison beyond crypto to the traditional financial system. He cited estimates from the United Nation Office on Drugs and Crime, which estimates that 2–5% of global gross domestic product is laundered through the traditional financial system, including the banks that the BPI represents.

Importantly, Shirzad did not argue that crypto regulation is unnecessary. Instead, he said none of this excuses crypto from scrutiny. He acknowledged that bad actors exploit every financial rail and that stablecoin issuers and exchanges should invest in AML efforts, sanctions screening, and intelligence sharing.

The daily chart shows the total digital asset market cap at $2.5 trillion. Source: TOTAL on TradingView.com

Featured image from OpenArt, chart from TradingView.com

İlgili Sorular

QWhat is the main argument presented by the Bank Policy Institute (BPI) in its report regarding cryptocurrencies?

AThe BPI argues that cryptocurrencies and stablecoins are being used more often by money launderers and terrorist financiers, and claims that, unlike banks, crypto businesses do not face equivalent legal obligations to safeguard the financial system from abuse.

QWhat specific data from Chainalysis does the BPI cite to support its claim about the growth of illicit crypto activity?

AThe BPI cites Chainalysis's 2026 Annual Report, which states that illicit crypto addresses received $154 billion in 2025, representing a 162% year-over-year increase.

QHow did Coinbase's Chief Policy Officer, Faryad Shirzad, counter the BPI's framing of the illicit activity data?

AShirzad pointed out that while the BPI leads with the $154 billion figure, the same Chainalysis report concludes that illicit activity remains under 1% of total on-chain volume, and that this share has stayed at or below that level for years.

QWhat comparison did Shirzad make to the traditional financial system in his response?

AShirzad cited estimates from the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, which estimates that 2–5% of global GDP is laundered through the traditional financial system, including the banks that the BPI represents.

QWhat is the BPI's overall conclusion and recommended solution for the perceived regulatory imbalance?

AThe BPI's overall conclusion is that the US should not treat compliance as a competitive advantage. It argues that all market participants should share the same baseline AML and sanctions obligations so illicit activity cannot exploit differences in legal coverage.

İlgili Okumalar

How Many Tokens Away Is Yang Zhilin from the 'Moon Chasing the Light'?

The article explores the intense competition between two leading Chinese AI companies, DeepSeek and Kimi (Moon Dark Side), and the mounting pressure on Yang Zhilin, the founder of Kimi. While DeepSeek re-emerged after 15 months of silence with its powerful V4 model—boasting 1.6 trillion parameters and low-cost, long-context capabilities—Kimi has been focusing on long-context processing and multi-agent systems with its K2.6 model. Yang faces a threefold challenge: technological rivalry, commercialization pressure, and investor expectations. Despite Kimi’s high valuation (reaching $18 billion), its revenue heavily relies on a single product with low paid conversion rates, while DeepSeek’s strategic silence and open-source influence have strengthened its market position and valuation prospects, now targeting over $20 billion. Both companies reflect broader trends in China’s AI ecosystem: Kimi aims for global influence through open-source contributions and agent-based advancements, while DeepSeek prioritizes foundational innovation and hardware independence, notably shifting to Huawei’s chips. Their competition is seen as vital for China’s AI progress, with the gap between top Chinese and U.S. models narrowing to just 2.7% on the Elo rating scale. Ultimately, the article argues that this rivalry, though anxiety-inducing for leaders like Zhilin, is essential for driving innovation and solidifying China’s role in the global AI landscape.

marsbit4 saat önce

How Many Tokens Away Is Yang Zhilin from the 'Moon Chasing the Light'?

marsbit4 saat önce

TechFlow Intelligence Bureau: ChatGPT Helps Amateur Mathematician Crack 60-Year-Old Problem, CFTC Sues New York Regulator Over Coinbase and Gemini

An amateur mathematician, with the assistance of ChatGPT, has solved a combinatorial mathematics puzzle originally proposed by Hungarian mathematician Paul Erdős in the 1960s. This marks another milestone in AI-aided mathematical research, demonstrating the evolving capabilities of large language models in formal reasoning. In other AI developments, OpenAI introduced a new privacy filter tool for enterprise API usage, automatically screening sensitive data. Meanwhile, the Qwen3.6-27B model achieved 100 tokens per second on a single RTX 5090 GPU using quantization, significantly lowering the cost barrier for local AI deployment. In crypto and Web3, the U.S. CFTC sued New York’s financial regulator, challenging its oversight of Coinbase and Gemini—a first-of-its-kind federal-state regulatory clash. Following a vulnerability, KelpDAO and major DeFi protocols established a recovery fund. Tether froze $344 million in assets linked to Iran’s central bank upon U.S. Treasury request, highlighting the centralized control risks in stablecoins. Separately, Litecoin underwent a 3-hour chain reorganization to undo a privacy-layer exploit. In the U.S., former President Trump invoked the Defense Production Act to address power grid bottlenecks affecting AI data centers and dismissed the entire National Science Board, raising concerns over research independence. A retail trader gained 250% on a $600k Intel options bet amid AI-related speculation. Xiaomi announced its first performance electric vehicle, targeting rivals like Tesla. Meanwhile, iPhone users reported devices automatically reinstalling a hidden app daily, suspected to be MDM-related. A Chinese securities report noted that A-share institutional crowding has reached its second-longest streak since 2007, signaling high valuations and potential style rotation. The day’s developments reflect a dual narrative: AI is enabling unprecedented individual breakthroughs, while centralized power structures—whether governmental or corporate—are becoming more assertive, underscoring that decentralization is as much a political-economic challenge as a technical one.

marsbit5 saat önce

TechFlow Intelligence Bureau: ChatGPT Helps Amateur Mathematician Crack 60-Year-Old Problem, CFTC Sues New York Regulator Over Coinbase and Gemini

marsbit5 saat önce

İşlemler

Spot
Futures
活动图片