The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has taken steps toward a more permissive crypto regulatory stance, but it has not granted blanket approval to the industry. According to Reuters reporting, the agency’s recent moves show narrower changes: more clarity on how certain crypto assets are treated and more room for specific crypto interfaces to operate without immediate broker-dealer registration.
On April 13, the SEC’s Division of Trading and Markets released a staff statement on user interfaces used in crypto asset securities transactions. The statement said staff would not object in some cases if an interface provider created or operated such an interface without registering as a broker-dealer.
Commissioner Hester Peirce said the statement addressed front ends and self-custodial wallets used by investors in onchain crypto asset securities transactions. However, the relief was limited and applied only to specific circumstances. The SEC did not issue broad authorization for exchanges, token issuers, or the wider crypto market.
The larger policy shift came on March 17, when the SEC issued long-awaited guidance on how federal securities laws apply to crypto assets. According to Reuters, the agency grouped tokens into categories including digital commodities, stablecoins, and digital securities, while stating that securities laws apply only to digital securities.
This guidance represented a major change from the agency’s earlier, more enforcement-heavy approach. The SEC has clarified that federal securities laws apply to digital securities, while many other crypto assets may fall outside that category. At the same time, the agency has continued to stress conditions, categories, and legal boundaries rather than offering broad approval.
Recent Reuters reporting indicated that the SEC’s enforcement activity dropped sharply in fiscal 2025 as the agency shifted its focus toward fraud, investor harm, and market integrity instead of pursuing high volumes of novel cases, including some tied to digital assets.
The SEC has opened a narrower path for some parts of the crypto ecosystem, but it has not declared that all crypto activity is cleared or approved. A crypto asset could still be treated differently if marketed as an investment tied to profit expectations. The most precise reading is that the regulator has made the rules more favorable for parts of the industry while keeping key legal limits in place.
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