Thank you.
If you look at the example of the market and the regulations in Europe in terms of markets and crypto-assets, they looked at utility tokens. They actually left Bitcoins and Ethereum out of this outlook. They looked at utility tokens and stablecoins and NFTs, specifically if they fractionalized, because then they become a security.
What is important here is that they looked at not only how to create consumer confidence but also how to create more stability in the marketplace and attract investment. Europe is a large market for crypto-assets. It represents 25% of the world economy in terms of crypto-asset trading.
I think if we're going to develop a regulatory system to manage that from a consumer point of view, capping certain trading, as MiCA has done on certain transactions up to $200 million per day, which is a small amount, then we have to go beyond that and send a signal that we are in an innovation environment in which experimentation is going to be important, and that we're going to allow for regulatory sandboxes.
It's true that regulators have to work directly with industry because that's where the main knowledge and innovation take place, but we have to allow for some regulatory sandboxes to do that experimentation, to have a better understanding of intended and unintended consequences, whether in terms of the period of time, capping trading or demanding specific aspects that could be measured at a specific period of time to make that happen.
That would be my recommendation on that.