California Assembly Passes Digital Financial Assets Bill

On Sep 1, 2022 at 12:32 pm UTC by · 2 mins read

California appears to be the state with the most interest in Bitcoin (BTC) and Ether (ETH) based on internet search data.

The California State Assembly has unanimously passed the Digital Financial Assets Bill creating tighter restrictions for crypto firms operating in the state.

Sponsored by Assemblyman Timothy Grayson, the new bill seeks to provide necessary protection for crypto market participants. Also, it will promote a healthy cryptocurrency market in the state. The bill mandates digital asset exchanges and crypto firms to obtain an operating license from the state’s Department of Financial Protection and Innovation. If signed, it will take effect from January 1, 2025

What the Digital Financial Assets Bill Entails

The Digital Financial Assets law is similar to New York’s BitLicense. The New York Government signed BitLicense into law at the same time a similar California law fell through in 2015.

The new bill summarily prohibits operating in the state without a license. Where violation occurs, the culprits would pay a daily fine of $100,000. Additionally, the requirement prohibits California-licensed entities from dealing with stablecoins. The prohibition affects all stablecoins which are not issued by a bank or licensed by the California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation. The prohibition will phase out in 2028.

Likewise, the bill specifies using the generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) to calculate the aggregate market value of assets. The new bill would also allow the department to probe licensees. It’s now up to Governor Gavin Newsom to either accept the motion or veto it.

Reactions to the Bill

According to CoinGecko, California appears to be the state with the most interest in Bitcoin (BTC) and Ether (ETH) based on internet search data. Previously, the state also allowed crypto donations to political campaigns.

Given the level of interest of California citizens in cryptocurrency, Assemblyman Grayson believes the bill will make the cryptocurrency market safer for all participants. He said:

“A healthy cryptocurrency market can only exist if simple guardrails are established.”

Meanwhile, the Blockchain Association considers the bill to be unnecessarily restrictive. The group tweeted that the bill would be an industry trade group, tweeted that the bill would “impede crypto innovators’ ability to operate.” The bill could also send several crypto firms out of the state.

Whether or not Governor Newsom will sign the bill into law is anybody’s guess at the time.

Share:

Related Articles

Bitcoin Hits ‘Deep Value’ as RSI Plummets to 23: Is the High-Conviction Bottom In?

By February 13th, 2026

Bitcoin RSI Hits 23: Analysts Flag ‘Deep Value’ Entry Point

Bitcoin Price Prediction: New Bitcoin Protocol Upgrade Makes BTC More Quantum-Resistant – $1 Million BTC Possible Now?

By February 12th, 2026

Bitcoin’s march toward becoming a global reserve asset has faced one persistent existential question: What happens when quantum computers become powerful enough to crack its cryptography? A new proposal, BIP-360, aims to answer this, potentially clearing the final hurdle for institutional adoption. But is $1 million a real possibility for Bitcoin? For now, the first […]

Ethereum Foundation Partners With SEAL to Combat Wallet Drainers

By February 10th, 2026

Ethereum Foundation Partners With SEAL to Fight Wallet Drainers

Exit mobile version