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SEC Chair Says Crypto Markets and the American People Deserve Clarity

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SEC Chair Paul Atkins says crypto markets deserve long-overdue clarity, outlining a token taxonomy and explaining how the Howey test applies to digital assets.

Soumen Datta

March 20, 2026

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SEC Chair Paul Atkins, joined by Commissioners Hester M. Peirce and Mark T. Uyeda, has publicly stated that crypto markets and the millions of Americans who participate in them deserve regulatory clarity that has been withheld for over a decade. Writing via CoinDesk, the three officials outlined how the Commission is reversing its previous approach of silence and ad-hoc enforcement, and replacing it with a formal framework grounded in existing law.

What Did the SEC Chair Actually Say?

In a joint statement, Atkins, Peirce, and Uyeda did not hold back in their criticism of how regulators had handled the crypto industry up to this point.

"For more than a decade, American investors and innovators have operated under a cloud of uncertainty about when crypto assets implicate the federal securities laws," the three officials wrote. "Yet, for too long, financial regulators have responded to good-faith regulatory inquiries with silence, raised barriers to entry, and ad-hoc enforcement actions that only deepened the industry's confusion."

The statement is notable because it comes directly from the sitting Chair and two sitting Commissioners, not from outside commentators. It is an internal acknowledgment that the SEC's prior approach failed the market.

The officials also addressed the role of Congress in the bigger picture:

"Only Congress can rewrite the law, and we stand ready to work with CFTC Chairman Michael Selig to implement the CLARITY Act. In the meantime, we are providing the responsible regulatory approach that markets demand."

The Joint SEC and CFTC Interpretation Behind the Statement

The CoinDesk statement from Atkins and the two commissioners follows a joint interpretation that the SEC and CFTC had already released earlier in the week. That document, approved at the Commission level and scheduled for publication in the Federal Register, formally maps out how existing federal law applies to crypto assets and which agency has oversight over which category.

CFTC Chairman Michael S. Selig described the joint release as reflecting "a shared commitment to developing workable, harmonized regulations."

The joint interpretation also addressed several activities that have sat in regulatory gray areas for years. Protocol staking, where a user locks up tokens to help validate a blockchain network, is treated differently depending on whether it is done independently or through a managed third-party pool. 

Airdrops, where projects distribute tokens to wallet addresses for free, are assessed based on the nature of the token and how the distribution is structured. Token wrapping, such as converting Bitcoin into Wrapped Bitcoin (WBTC) for use on Ethereum, does not automatically reclassify a non-security token as a security.

How Does the New Taxonomy Define Crypto Assets?

The core of the SEC's new framework is a straightforward classification system. The statement establishes four categories of crypto assets that are not securities under federal law. This matters because assets outside securities law do not require SEC registration or compliance with securities disclosure rules.

The four non-security categories are:

  • Digital commodities: Includes Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), Solana (SOL)XRP, Dogecoin (DOGE), and 11 others including Chainlink (LINK), Polkadot (DOT), and Shiba Inu (SHIB). A total of 16 assets are explicitly named.
  • Digital collectibles: Covers NFTs and memecoins. A memecoin is a crypto token that draws most of its value from community sentiment and internet culture, not from underlying technology or utility.
  • Digital tools: Includes utility tokens and assets like ENS (Ethereum Name Service) domains, which function as software tools rather than investment products.
  • Payment stablecoins: Compliant stablecoins that meet the requirements of the GENIUS Act, used primarily for payments and pegged to the U.S. dollar.

Only one category stays inside securities law: digital securities, meaning tokenized versions of conventional financial instruments like stocks or bonds.

What Is the Howey Test, and Why Does It Matter for Crypto?

The Howey test is the legal standard U.S. courts use to determine whether something is an investment contract, and by extension, a security. It comes from a 1946 Supreme Court ruling and asks whether there is an investment of money in a common enterprise, with a reasonable expectation of profits coming from the efforts of others.

The recent statement explains how this applies to early-stage crypto projects. When a development team makes explicit promises that lead buyers to expect profit from that team's continued work, the token sale constitutes an investment contract. That puts it under securities law.

When Does a Token Leave Securities Law Classification?

This is where the guidance adds something genuinely new. The statement explains that an investment contract can terminate as a project matures.

Once a team has completed or resolved the specific promises it made to early buyers, those buyers can no longer claim they are relying on the team's efforts for profit. At that point, the investment contract ends, and the token is freed from securities law obligations.

The key requirement is clear disclosure. Project teams must spell out the representations they are making so that investors understand exactly what they are buying into. As the statement puts it, "Howey reliance must stem from clear and unambiguous promises the project team intends to undertake."

What Is the SEC's Role Under This New Framework?

The statement draws a firm line around what the SEC sees as its proper function under the new guidance. The officials wrote that "the SEC's role is to provide merit-neutral clarity, not dictate how teams design their projects."

That framing is deliberate. It signals that the Commission is not trying to control how blockchain projects build their products or structure their tokenomics. Instead, the focus is on ensuring that the rules are knowable and consistently applied.

The statement also spells out what clearer rules are supposed to unlock for enforcement:

"Clear rules also allow regulators to focus enforcement resources where they belong: combatting fraud and protecting market integrity within the limits of our statutory authority."

In other words, regulatory clarity is not just about helping developers. It also allows the SEC to direct its attention toward bad actors rather than spending resources on ambiguous classification disputes.

America's Capital Markets and the Bigger Picture

The officials tied the crypto guidance to a broader argument about U.S. financial leadership. "For generations, America's capital markets have been the world's most dynamic and trusted," they wrote. "A crucial ingredient of that success is our regulatory system's ability to embrace new technologies without sacrificing strong investor protections."

They described blockchain networks and crypto assets as "another opportunity to strike that balance," and closed with a direct statement: "Crypto markets, and the millions of Americans who participate in them, deserve long-overdue clarity.”

  1. Report by CoinDesk: Crypto markets – and the American people – deserve clarity

  2. Press release by US SEC: SEC Clarifies the Application of Federal Securities Laws to Crypto Assets

  3. Press release by CFTC: CFTC Joins SEC to Clarify the Application of Federal Securities Laws to Crypto Assets

  4. Full Interpretive Release (PDF) The 68-page joint SEC/CFTC document containing the token taxonomy, digital commodity definition, and the named list of 18 assets.

Frequently Asked Questions

What did SEC Chair Paul Atkins say about crypto regulation?

Atkins, alongside Commissioners Peirce and Uyeda, said that crypto markets and American investors deserve clarity that regulators failed to provide for over a decade. He outlined a new taxonomy of crypto assets, confirmed that most are not securities, and explained how the Howey investment contract test applies to digital tokens.

Which crypto assets are confirmed as not securities under the new SEC framework?

The SEC has named 16 digital commodities, including Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, XRP, and Dogecoin, as assets that are not securities. NFTs, memecoins, utility tokens, and compliant payment stablecoins also fall outside securities law under the new classification.

What is the CLARITY Act and how does it relate to this SEC guidance?

The CLARITY Act is bipartisan legislation moving through Congress that would formally establish how crypto assets are regulated under U.S. law. The SEC has said it is ready to work with CFTC Chairman Michael Selig to implement it, while the current interpretation serves as regulatory guidance in the meantime.

Disclaimer

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article do not necessarily represent the views of BSCN. The information provided in this article is for educational and entertainment purposes only and should not be construed as investment advice, or advice of any kind. BSCN assumes no responsibility for any investment decisions made based on the information provided in this article. If you believe that the article should be amended, please reach out to the BSCN team by emailing [email protected].

Author

Soumen Datta

Soumen has been a crypto researcher since 2020 and holds a master’s in Physics. His writing and research has been published by publications such as CryptoSlate and DailyCoin, as well as BSCN. His areas of focus include Bitcoin, DeFi, and high-potential altcoins like Ethereum, Solana, XRP, and Chainlink. He combines analytical depth with journalistic clarity to deliver insights for both newcomers and seasoned crypto readers.

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