SEI's been making serious moves lately on the regulatory chess board. They're not just sitting back – they've got boots on the ground meeting with government officials and regulatory bodies spanning the US, European Union, and various Asian markets. What's interesting? The range of engagement. We're talking joint policy frameworks, direct sessions with central banking authorities, formal regulatory consultation processes, and fresh institutional alliance agreements. It's a full-court press to get a seat at the table where the rules are actually being written. Whether this translates to tangible policy influence remains to be seen, but the level of institutional outreach is undeniable.
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VitaliksTwin
· 11-30 07:41
Hmm... this political trap seems to be real, but don't celebrate too early; how much can actually take shape in the end still depends on the outcome.
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LiquidityWizard
· 11-30 07:40
ngl, the whole "boots on the ground" narrative is kinda theater until we see actual policy outcomes. like, statistically speaking, how many of these "institutional alliances" actually move the needle vs just padding the pr machine? empirically, that conversion rate historically sits around 15-20% max.
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FortuneTeller42
· 11-30 07:37
Ngl, it's already good if this trap of regulatory lobbying can bring about a few friendly policies, but it depends on which decision-making circles they can actually penetrate.
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RugPullSurvivor
· 11-30 07:25
ngl I've seen this trap too many times, will it eventually end up with me being played people for suckers again?
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GateUser-c802f0e8
· 11-30 07:13
Ngl, this operation is a bit harsh, talking directly with those central banking people... but whether it can really influence policy in the end is hard to say.
SEI's been making serious moves lately on the regulatory chess board. They're not just sitting back – they've got boots on the ground meeting with government officials and regulatory bodies spanning the US, European Union, and various Asian markets. What's interesting? The range of engagement. We're talking joint policy frameworks, direct sessions with central banking authorities, formal regulatory consultation processes, and fresh institutional alliance agreements. It's a full-court press to get a seat at the table where the rules are actually being written. Whether this translates to tangible policy influence remains to be seen, but the level of institutional outreach is undeniable.