Treasury Proposes 'Hold Law' Giving Crypto Exchanges Freeze Authority
The U.S. Treasury Department has formally recommended that Congress establish a digital asset-specific "hold law" — a legal framework that would allow crypto exchanges and financial institutions to temporarily freeze funds suspected of being tied to illicit activity. The recommendation was published in a Treasury report to Congress produced under the GENIUS Act (Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins), which focuses on tools to counter illicit finance in digital asset markets.
Under current law, exchanges occupy a legal grey zone: they can detect suspicious on-chain flows using blockchain analytics, but lack a clean statutory basis to hold those assets without risking liability. The proposed safe harbor would change that, giving platforms a defined window to pause transfers while law enforcement works through the legal process.
The Regulatory Gap This Targets
The core problem the Treasury is addressing is a speed mismatch. Blockchain transactions settle in seconds or minutes. Law enforcement and court orders do not. By the time investigators obtain legal authority to freeze assets, funds have often been bridged, mixed, or converted across multiple protocols.
"Exchanges often detect suspicious funds using blockchain intelligence, but there is not always a clear legal framework that allows them to hold those assets long enough for investigators to act," said Ari Redbord, global head of policy at TRM Labs, in comments to Decrypt.
Traditional banks already have limited authority to delay suspicious transactions, but that power is narrow and requires either a court order or sanctions authority. For crypto exchanges, the problem is compounded — there is no clean "pending state" equivalent, and the Bank Secrecy Act protects institutions that file Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs) in good faith but does not explicitly authorize them to freeze the underlying funds.
Legal Paradox Remains Unresolved
Critics and legal analysts point to a structural contradiction embedded in the proposal. SAR rules prohibit institutions from disclosing to a customer that a report has been filed — a practice known as "tipping off." However, freezing a customer's assets creates an observable event that signals exactly that. The customer knows their funds are frozen but cannot legally be told why.
Andrew Rossow, public affairs attorney and CEO of AR Media Consulting, flagged this directly: if transparency obligations require acknowledging a freeze while SAR rules prohibit explaining the investigation behind it, exchanges are caught in a compliance paradox with no clean resolution under the current draft framework.
Additional concerns center on the reliability of blockchain analytics tools used to flag suspicious activity — tools that can produce false positives and expose legitimate users to unjustified asset freezes.
Market and Regulatory Context
This proposal lands as Congress accelerates work on comprehensive crypto market structure legislation, with the Trump administration pushing for faster regulatory clarity. The GENIUS Act stablecoin framework is one of several bills moving through the legislative pipeline. A hold law, if enacted, would represent one of the most operationally significant compliance requirements ever imposed on centralized crypto exchanges in the U.S.
It would also formalize the role of private exchanges as de facto enforcement intermediaries — a shift with long-term implications for how platforms manage compliance risk, user relationships, and jurisdictional exposure.
Trading Implications
- Liquidity risk on centralized venues: If major U.S.-regulated exchanges gain freeze authority, traders holding large positions on those platforms face a new category of counterparty risk — particularly during periods of heightened regulatory scrutiny or market stress. This could accelerate capital migration to offshore or decentralized venues.
- Funding rate and OI sensitivity: Regulatory headlines of this nature tend to compress open interest on BTC and ETH perps in the short term as traders reduce exposure to regulatory uncertainty. Watch for funding rate normalization or brief negative flips on news of legislative progress.
- Altcoin and stablecoin exposure: Tokens with known mixer associations or privacy-focused use cases (e.g., XMR-adjacent assets) face elevated delisting or freeze risk under this framework, which could trigger sharp liquidation cascades in thinly traded altcoin perp markets.
- Volatility trigger: Final passage of a hold law would likely be a one-time volatility event — bearish short-term on centralized exchange sentiment, potentially neutral-to-bullish longer term if it accelerates institutional adoption by reducing illicit finance risk premiums.