Eleanor Terrett on Crypto’s Next Chapter: Regulation, Real-World Utility, and the Path to Mainstream Finance
In Episode 7 of Blockchain 100 on Binance Square, journalist Eleanor Terrett shared her perspective on the evolution of crypto regulation in the United States, the growing role of blockchain in finance, and what the industry still needs to do to earn broader public trust.
A former Fox Business producer and reporter with nearly a decade in financial media, Terrett has become one of the most closely followed independent journalists covering digital asset policy in Washington. In the conversation, she reflected on how she entered crypto reporting, why US regulatory developments matter globally, and where she sees the industry heading next.
From Traditional Finance to Crypto Policy Reporting
Terrett said her path into crypto was largely accidental. While working at Fox Business, she began digging into the SEC’s case against Ripple, a turning point she described as her entry into the space. That reporting eventually led to a deeper focus on what she called the US government’s broader pattern of “regulation by enforcement” toward crypto firms.
To better understand the sector, she took a blockchain course through Oxford University and immersed herself in the history and mechanics of digital assets. At a time when mainstream coverage focused mostly on token prices, Terrett said she saw an opening in reporting on the policy and legal battles shaping the industry behind the scenes.
That niche helped define her work. She later left traditional media to build her own platform, saying the move gave her more freedom to report, interview key figures, and expand her brand independently.
Why US Crypto Legislation Has Global Implications
A key theme of the interview was the significance of US market structure legislation, especially the Clarity Act. Terrett described it as “essentially a rulebook for crypto,” one that could finally help determine which digital assets fall under securities law and which are treated as commodities.
That distinction has been central to the long-running jurisdictional friction between the SEC and the CFTC. According to Terrett, the stakes extend far beyond Washington. “The US still basically sets the tone for financial regulation,” she said, noting that policymakers in Europe, Asia, and the Middle East closely monitor US crypto legislation and often recalibrate their own approaches in response.
Even so, she stressed that legislation is only the beginning. Rulemaking and implementation can take years, particularly for major financial reforms. In her view, clearer regulation would still be a net positive for retail users, businesses, and the broader market by finally providing “rules of the road” for the industry.
Beyond Hype: Utility, Infrastructure, and Adoption
Terrett argued that crypto’s future depends less on narratives and more on practical value. “I think less hype and more substance,” she said, summarizing what the industry still needs most.
She pointed to examples where blockchain and digital assets can serve real needs, from self-custody offering a financial lifeline in difficult personal circumstances to onchain systems improving supply chain and livestock tracking. While acknowledging that crypto has “certainly made rich people richer,” she also said its long-term promise lies in becoming embedded infrastructure rather than a niche speculative theme.
In her words, the destination is a future where “TradFi or DeFi, one day it’s just going to be Fi.” That would mean blockchain becoming a normal part of finance rather than a separate category.
Looking ahead, Terrett said stablecoins are likely to be integrated “pretty seamlessly” as backend financial infrastructure. She also expects tokenization and blockchain-based settlement to reduce friction in capital markets, potentially moving traditional settlement cycles toward “T+0,” or instant settlement.
Risks, Misinformation, and the Next Big Challenge
Terrett also warned about persistent misinformation in crypto, particularly in an era of viral social content and AI-generated media. Her advice was simple: verify sources, avoid acting on unconfirmed claims, and be cautious of information that spreads faster than facts.
On longer-term risks, she highlighted quantum computing as one of the most under-discussed challenges facing blockchain security. While not an immediate threat, she said growing concerns about quantum advances mean the industry should begin preparing now.
A More Mature Crypto Era?
Over five years of covering digital assets, Terrett said one of the biggest shifts in her own thinking has been moving beyond the view of crypto as purely speculative. Through conversations with builders and founders, she said she has come to see blockchain as a foundation for much broader innovation.
For crypto to truly “arrive,” however, the sector must continue moving toward clearer regulation, stronger education, and everyday usability. Success, in her view, will come when crypto stops being a headline-driven exception and simply becomes part of the financial system’s core plumbing.
As policymakers, institutions, and builders continue shaping the next phase of the industry, Terrett’s message was clear: the future of crypto will be defined not just by price action, but by whether blockchain can deliver durable, real-world utility at scale.