March 7, 2024 marks a pivotal day for digital asset regulation in the United States and beyond. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s Global Markets Advisory Committee advanced three major recommendations, including the first-ever comprehensive digital asset taxonomy designed to bring regulatory clarity to the rapidly evolving crypto industry. Meanwhile, Nigeria’s Securities and Exchange Commission unveiled new anti-money laundering guidelines for virtual asset service providers, signaling that crypto regulation is accelerating worldwide.
TL;DR
- The CFTC’s GMAC advanced a first-ever digital asset taxonomy for U.S. regulatory clarity
- Commissioner Caroline D. Pham sponsored the recommendations, which were approved without objection
- The taxonomy covers digital assets, stablecoins, CBDCs, and more
- Nigeria’s SEC introduced AML/CFT/CPF guidelines for licensing and screening VASPs
- Bitcoin traded at $66,925 as the global crypto market cap reached $2.5 trillion
CFTC’s Digital Asset Taxonomy: A Regulatory Milestone
The CFTC’s Global Markets Advisory Committee, sponsored by Commissioner Caroline D. Pham, formally advanced three new recommendations on March 7, 2024. The most significant for the crypto industry is the publication of a comprehensive digital asset taxonomy — the first of its kind from a U.S. regulatory body. The framework was developed by the GMAC’s Digital Asset Markets Subcommittee and aims to standardize terminology across the digital asset ecosystem.
The taxonomy was extensively vetted by a broad range of stakeholders, including regulatory authorities, financial institutions, asset managers, market infrastructures, and service providers. Its purpose is to provide consistent language for participants in the digital asset ecosystem, promote innovation, and identify and address regulatory gaps. The framework covers digital assets broadly, including subcategories such as stablecoins, central bank digital currencies, and tokenized securities.
Commissioner Pham emphasized the significance of the milestone, stating that the digital asset taxonomy framework provides valuable foundational guidelines to further advance the discussion and promote U.S. regulatory clarity. She noted that the GMAC has now published a total of 11 recommendations spanning a wide range of market infrastructure topics, from U.S. Treasury market liquidity and well-functioning repo markets to exchange volatility controls and trade reporting data for monitoring systemic risk.
U.S. Treasury ETFs and T+1 Settlement
Beyond the digital asset taxonomy, the GMAC advanced two additional recommendations. The first calls for the inclusion of U.S. Treasury exchange-traded funds as eligible initial margin collateral for uncleared swaps. While standalone U.S. Treasury bonds can currently be used as initial margin collateral, the ETFs that invest in them — which offer greater diversification and can mitigate idiosyncratic risk — are not similarly eligible. The recommendation seeks to address this inconsistency.
The second additional recommendation provides resources and guidance for the upcoming transition to T+1 securities settlement, a critical operational change affecting market participants across the financial industry. The GMAC meeting also included a keynote presentation from Financial Stability Board Secretary General John Schindler on the FSB’s 2024 work program and priorities, along with a panel discussion on the impact of the Basel III endgame proposal on derivatives markets and access to clearing.
Nigeria’s SEC Strengthens Crypto Oversight
On the same day, Nigeria’s Securities and Exchange Commission announced new anti-money laundering guidelines designed to license, register, and screen digital and virtual asset service providers operating in the country. The guidelines, known as AML/CFT/CPF (Anti-Money Laundering/Combating the Financing of Terrorism/Counter-Financing of Proliferation), represent a significant step in Nigeria’s efforts to regulate its growing crypto market.
The Nigerian SEC submitted the new guidelines to the heads of government agencies’ anti-money laundering committee for final review. The initiative aims to ensure that criminals are not registered as operators in the capital market. The commission noted it is ready to interface with genuine virtual asset service providers based on clear rules and regulations.
This development follows the Central Bank of Nigeria’s decision on December 22, 2023, to lift its previous ban on cryptocurrency transactions and issue operational guidelines for VASPs to all banks and other financial institutions. Nigeria has emerged as one of Africa’s largest crypto markets, and these regulatory moves reflect an effort to balance innovation with consumer protection and financial integrity.
Global Regulatory Convergence
The events of March 7, 2024, illustrate a broader trend of regulatory convergence across the digital asset space. In the United States, the CFTC’s taxonomy effort complements other regulatory developments, including the Securities and Exchange Commission’s ongoing review of spot Bitcoin ETFs and various legislative proposals in Congress. The GMAC’s work, in particular, reflects a pragmatic approach to creating shared definitions and standards that can guide future rulemaking.
The Nigerian SEC’s AML framework, meanwhile, aligns with global standards set by the Financial Action Task Force and reflects the growing recognition that crypto regulation requires coordinated international action. As digital assets become increasingly integrated into the global financial system — with the total market capitalization reaching approximately $2.5 trillion and Bitcoin trading above $66,900 — regulators worldwide are moving from reactive enforcement to proactive framework-building.
Why This Matters
The CFTC’s digital asset taxonomy could become the foundation for how U.S. regulators categorize and oversee crypto assets for years to come. Standardized definitions are a prerequisite for effective regulation — you cannot regulate what you cannot consistently define. For market participants, this brings much-needed clarity about which regulatory regime applies to which assets. Nigeria’s parallel moves demonstrate that crypto regulation is not just a developed-world concern but a global priority. Together, these developments signal that the era of regulatory ambiguity for digital assets is gradually giving way to structured, framework-driven oversight.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or investment advice. Readers should consult qualified professionals for guidance on regulatory compliance and digital asset investments.
having a standard definition for digital assets, stablecoins, and CBDCs all in one place means regulators can finally stop talking past each other
passed without objection is the key phrase here. when was the last time anything crypto related got unanimous support from a US regulatory committee
the Digital Asset Markets Subcommittee doing the heavy lifting here is exactly how good policy gets made. stakeholders actually drafting the definitions instead of politicians guessing
Nigeria VASP guidelines + US taxonomy on the same day. the global regulatory puzzle pieces are finally clicking together