U.S. regulators are accelerating crypto oversight by using interpretive rules, signaling a faster policy rollout strategy that prioritizes immediate clarity over traditional rulemaking processes.
Key Takeaways:
A Government Accountability Office (GAO) review clarifies how U.S. regulators are advancing crypto policy while avoiding a judgment on the rule itself. The GAO, a congressional watchdog, issued its report on a joint rule from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on April 8. The report confirms the procedural path used to implement the rule, offering insight into regulatory strategy rather than policy effectiveness across digital asset markets.
The document makes clear that the agencies framed the rule as an interpretive measure, which is central to understanding its rollout. The report states:
“This rule provides an interpretation of the definition of ‘security’ as applied to crypto assets.”
That classification determines which legal requirements apply and which can be bypassed. By documenting this framing, the GAO confirms regulators selected a faster, lower-friction route to introduce crypto guidance within existing securities law structures.
That choice allowed the SEC and CFTC to avoid standard procedures tied to major financial rules. The report notes: “The Agencies determined that the interpretation in this rule may take effect immediately pursuant to 5 U.S.C. § 808(2) because it is an interpretive rule and thus exempt from the Administrative Procedure Act’s notice and comment requirements.” Section 808(2) is a provision under the Congressional Review Act that permits immediate implementation of certain rules when agencies justify bypassing delays. The GAO also recorded:
“In its submission to us, the agencies indicated that they did not publish a proposed rule or solicit public comments.”
For market participants, this signals a regulatory preference for speed and clarity over extended consultation.
The report also highlights how regulators are positioning the rule’s economic impact without supporting it with formal analysis. According to the GAO, the agencies argued the framework “should reduce costs for issuers of digital securities and crypto asset-related securities.”
At the same time, they indicated that a cost-benefit analysis was not required. This reflects a broader pattern in crypto oversight, where interpretive guidance advances policy objectives while limiting procedural obligations. The GAO’s role is to record these claims for congressional visibility, not to validate them.
Ultimately, the GAO review functions as a procedural checkpoint that informs Congress while signaling how regulators are structuring crypto policy. It noted that the agencies classify crypto assets into categories “based on their characteristics, uses, and functions.” That framework suggests a systematic approach to aligning digital assets with securities laws. While the report does not assess effectiveness, it confirms that U.S. agencies are using interpretive authority to accelerate crypto rulemaking, a trend likely to shape market structure going forward.
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