Editor's note: Morning Money is a free version of POLITICO Pro Financial Services morning newsletter, which is delivered to our subscribers each morning at 5:15 a.m. The POLITICO Pro platform combines the news you need with tools you can use to take action on the day's biggest stories. Act on the news with POLITICO Pro. SEC Chair Gary Gensler is vying to answer the thorniest questions that have hounded the U.S. stock market and crypto marketplaces for years. It's riled up everyone from Silicon Valley's Sand Hill Road to Wall Street. And they're all in Washington this week to gripe about it. In one corner, executives from leading U.S. brokerages and trading firms — plus some Democrats on the Hill — are blasting the regulator's work to revamp the fundamental piping of the stock market. The concerns are bound to take center stage Wednesday when industry leaders gather at the Security Traders Association's annual market structure conference in Washington. Don't be surprised if you hear talk about suing the SEC, which is threatening to crack down on lucrative business models that Wall Street intermediaries have enjoyed for years but critics say are unfair to individual investors. Virtu Financial CEO Doug Cifu, who will speak at the conference and leads one of the firms that stands to lose under the new regulations, described to MM a potential "conga line to the D.C. court." (Read more from Cifu in Declan's deep dive on the market structure fight.) Meanwhile, Gensler is still public enemy No. 1 for many in the crypto policy set. Dozens of the industry's executives, lobbyists and attorneys crammed into a dimly-lit event space in downtown Washington for D.C. Fintech Week on Tuesday to talk through a landscape that's been dominated by Gensler's contention that most crypto businesses can be regulated under existing law. Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse, who is fighting the SEC in court over allegations that his company had sold unregistered securities, told the group, "it's maddening." But Gensler has powerful allies, including fellow regulators who are beginning to share more of the crypto world's ire. CFTC Chair Rostin Behnam appeared at the fintech conference Tuesday and dismissed criticism of his agency's case against Ooki DAO, a purportedly decentralized investment platform that was busted for hosting illegal commodities trading. Acting Comptroller of the Currency Michael Hsu issued his own warning that crypto platforms are hiding behind marketing slogans and terminology that evoke traditional finance, but lack safeguards that typically protect consumers. Behnam, Hsu and Gensler recently signed off on a Financial Stability Oversight Council report that called for regulators to flex their authority in crypto. Gensler's next move? Look for details when he speaks Friday at the Georgetown Financial Market Quality conference. IT'S WEDNESDAY — Sam and Declan are in Washington for conferences and meetings. Got tips, story ideas or feedback to power us through the week? Send them our way: kdavidson@politico.com and ssutton@politico.com.
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