Crypto’s latest inflection point an opportunity for Asia to lead, says Circle’s Yam Ki Chan

The conflicts and confusion around regulations in the digital asset industry in the U.S. have prompted policy makers and Web3 developers in other parts of the world to stand up and take note of an emerging opportunity.

No more so than in Asia, where governments in a number of jurisdictions — most notably Hong Kong, Singapore and Japan — are drawing up new rules of the road to attract investment and jobs from these emerging industries while the U.S. is distracted by arguments and lawsuits over cryptocurrency definitions.

Circle’s Yam Ki Chan, vice-president of strategy and policy at the Boston-based issuer of the world’s second largest stablecoin USDC, said it is too early to sound the death knell for the U.S. digital asset market. But he added that Asia’s ongoing shift from Web2 consumer to Web3 creator offers opportunity for the region to play a central role in developing the global digital asset industry.

Chan spoke with Forkast’s Will Fee at the WebX conference in Tokyo on July 25-26. This Q&A has been edited for length and clarity.

Will Fee: You arrived at Circle in April this year from Google in Hong Kong, and prior to that, as a U.S. government economic policy lead focused on Asia during the Obama administration. How are you finding the switch into the digital asset industry?

Yam Ki Chan: I’m learning a lot. It is a very vibrant industry, as you can see here at WebX. As I’ve seen at all the various conferences I’ve attended since I joined, there’s a real excitement in the community overall. It’s still a very nascent industry and I think it lends itself to, for the most part, the ecosystem trying to work together. We all want to see this ecosystem work. We all want to see it prosper. And then we’re all also working on ways to improve transparency, consumer protection and stability for the industry as a whole.

Fee: Corey Then, Circle’s vice-president of global policy, said during a previous interview that the regulatory scrutiny in the U.S. will prove to be a long-term positive for the development of the digital asset industry. Do you agree with that view?

Chan: Absolutely. Prior to all of this, I was a crypto skeptic. I was about as TradFi [traditional finance] as you can come. My first job out of college was with an investment bank in Silicon Valley. A tech focused one, but an investment bank nonetheless. And then I’ve worked at hedge funds, I’ve worked at microfinance institutions, I’ve worked at the U.S. Treasury Department. So pretty traditional finance. And there’s a lot of legitimate skepticism from folks outside the crypto industry to really wonder and question — what does this thing do? And the industry hasn’t helped itself, with a lot of the bad behavior from various actors we’ve seen over the past 12-18 months.