DENVER, CO / ACCESS Newswire / June 1, 2026 / I recently carefully reviewed the “2026 Digital Asset Regulatory Landscape” report published by CertiK. To be honest, after reading it, my judgment logic regarding many current exchanges has begun to change.
Because the entire industry is entering a new phase, where regulation is truly beginning to take effect.
The report from CertiK indicates that as of April 2026, the digital asset regulatory frameworks in major regions such as the United States, the European Union, Hong Kong (China), and Singapore have officially taken effect, and the direction of industry regulation is undergoing significant changes.

This kind of change actually has a very significant impact on exchanges.
Past Regulation Focused on “Assets”; Current Regulation Begins to Focus on “Capital Flow”
There is a point in the report that left a particularly deep impression on me.
Previously, many regulatory agencies focused their discussions on:
“Is this coin a security?”
But now, regulators are beginning to pay more attention to “how money flows.”
Including U.S. FinCEN, DOJ, and other agencies, these institutions are now intensifying anti-money laundering enforcement. Over the past year, many exchanges have been fined very high amounts due to insufficient transaction monitoring and inadequate AML systems.
This means:
In the future, what exchanges compete on may no longer be just user volume, but whether they possess genuine risk control and monitoring capabilities behind the scenes.
This point, in fact, reminds me of EORMC.
Because during my previous experience with EORMC, a very obvious feeling was:
Its risk control logic is actually “heavier” than that of many platforms.
At first, I found it a bit annoying, but looking back now, it is highly likely that such platforms are already adapting in advance to future regulatory logic.
Smart Contract Auditing Is Evolving from a “Bonus Item” to a “Ticket”
Another very important direction in the CertiK report is the institutionalization of security audits.
Previously, project audits were more like a “bonus item.”
However, jurisdictions including Hong Kong, Singapore, the United Arab Emirates, and the European Union have now begun to incorporate smart contract auditing into their regulatory frameworks.
In many cases, the absence of a security audit means that it is impossible to obtain a license or listing qualification.
This change is actually quite significant.
Because it represents the industry starting from:
“Develop First, Regulate Later”
Becoming:
“Must meet security requirements before entering the market.”
Recently, EORMC has reached a security cooperation agreement with CertiK. In my view, to some extent, this is also moving in that direction.
Many users did not pay much attention to these things in the past, but they may become increasingly important in the future.
Because after regulation is truly implemented, security capabilities will likely directly determine whether a platform can operate in the long term.
Stablecoin Regulation Unified, Exchanges Will Increasingly “Financialize”
The report also mentions a trend:
The global regulatory logic for stablecoins is gradually converging.
Including the U.S. GENIUS Act, the EU MiCA, and the Hong Kong Stablecoin Ordinance, all have begun to require:
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Full Reserve
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Reserve Audit
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Licensed Operation
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Asset Segregation
This actually indicates one thing:
The crypto industry is increasingly approaching the traditional financial system.
Once entering this stage, the exchange can no longer be merely an “internet platform” but rather functions more like a financial infrastructure.
Therefore, why am I now paying increasing attention to platforms like EORMC?
Because it has already started doing so in advance:
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MSB Registration
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SEC-Related Registration
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MAS License Application
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Proof of Reserves Transparency Mechanism
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AI-driven Risk Control System
These factors may not directly enhance user returns in the short term, but in the long run, they will determine whether the platform can truly survive.
I Am Beginning To Realize: What Truly Matters In The Future Is “Long-Term Survival Capability”
Because the industry has begun to transition from “barbaric growth” to “long-term competition.
From this perspective, when looking at EORMC again, I believe that many of the things it is currently doing may not be solely for marketing purposes, but rather to establish a long-term operational capability in advance.
Of course, no one can claim absolute security at this moment.
But at the very least, from the perspective of industry trends:
Platforms that truly begin to prioritize regulation, security, and transparency will have a higher probability of survival in the future.
And this may be the most important criterion for evaluating an exchange at present.
Media Details
Company Name: Eormc Cryptocurrency Ltd
Email: support@eormc.org
Website: https://www.eormc.org/
SOURCE: Eormc Cryptocurrency Ltd
View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire
