Analysis: The US and Europe disagreed on cryptocurrency regulation at Davos, and will remain subject to their respective regulatory constraints in the short term.

PANews reported on January 24th, citing CoinTelegraph, that cryptocurrency resurfaced as a secondary but influential topic at the Davos World Economic Forum (WEF), dominated by the "Greenland impasse." In his Davos speech, Trump reiterated his goal of making the US the "global crypto capital" and publicly supported crypto-friendly legislation, stating his desire to sign the Crypto Market Structure Act (CLARITY Act) soon—a statement more of a matter of time than direction. In contrast to the US stance, the European Central Bank (ECB) criticized private currencies and yield-bearing stablecoins at a crypto-themed roundtable, emphasizing the necessity of CBDCs and warning that private currencies could threaten financial stability and sovereignty. Overall, Davos 2026 reinforced the policy presence of stablecoins and tokenization, but significant differences in regulatory philosophies remain between the US and Europe, and related legislation and regulatory progress will continue to be constrained by their respective domestic regulations in the short term.

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Author: PA一线

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