The SEC should provide interpretive guidance for how blockchain projects can distribute crypto assets to participants without being characterized as securities offerings. These distributions are often called “airdrops” or “incentive-based rewards,” and blockchain projects typically conduct them for free, or in exchange for de minimis value, often as a reward for prior usage of the particular network or ecosystem. Such distributions are a critical tool for enabling blockchain projects to build community and progressively decentralize, as they disseminate ownership and control of a project to its users.
This process of decentralization has multiple benefits. Decentralization can guard investors against risks commonly associated with securities and centralized control and to facilitate the expansion of the network, thereby increasing its value. If the SEC were to provide guidance on distributions, it would stem the tide of airdrops and incentive-based rewards only being issued to non-U.S. persons — a trend that is effectively offshoring ownership of blockchain technologies developed in the U.S., and effectively creating windfall gains for non-U.S. persons at the expense of U.S. investors and developers.
The SEC should revise Regulation Crowdfunding rules to more effectively regulate exempt offerings for crypto assets.
The current limits on capital raising and investor participation in crowdfunding campaigns are ill-suited for crypto startups, which often need a broader distribution of crypto assets to develop a critical mass and network effects for their platforms, applications, or protocols.
These changes would empower early-stage crypto projects to access a wide pool of investors, democratizing access to promising investment opportunities while preserving transparency.
The current regulatory environment restricts traditional broker-dealers from engaging meaningfully in the crypto space — primarily because it requires brokers to obtain separate approvals to transact in crypto assets, and imposes even more onerous regulations around broker-dealers who wish to custody crypto assets.
These restrictions create unnecessary barriers to market participation and liquidity. Allowing broker-dealers to facilitate transactions in both crypto assets that are securities, as well as those that are not, would enhance market functionality, investor access, and investor protection. It would also recognize that on crypto platforms today, crypto assets that are clearly not securities (such as bitcoin, ether, or fiat-based stablecoins) trade seamlessly against crypto assets that the SEC may consider to be subject to securities laws.
This approach would promote a safer and more efficient marketplace, enabling broker-dealers to bring their expertise in best execution, compliance, and custody to crypto markets.
Custody and settlement remain critical barriers to institutional adoption of crypto assets. Ambiguity concerning regulatory treatment and accounting rules has deterred traditional financial institutions from entering the custody market. This means that many investors are not getting the benefit of fiduciary asset management for their investments, and instead are left investing on their own and arranging their own custody alternatives.
This clarity would provide the foundation for institutional confidence, enabling larger players to enter the market while also increasing market stability and competition among service providers. Furthermore, crypto investors, both retail and institutional, would receive the protections associated with professional, regulated asset management services.
The SEC should adopt reform measures for exchange-traded products (ETPs) that will foster financial innovation. The proposals promote broader market access to investors and fiduciaries used to managing portfolios of ETPs.
In a decentralized environment where the issuer of a crypto asset may play no significant continuing role, a question arises as to who bears responsibility for providing accurate disclosures around the asset. Fortunately, there exists a helpful analog from the traditional securities markets in the form of Exchange Act Rule 15c2-11, which permits broker-dealers to trade a security so long as there is, among other things, current information for the security available to investors.
Extending that principle into the crypto asset markets, the SEC could permit regulated crypto trading platforms (both exchanges and brokerages) to trade any asset for which the platform can provide investors with accurate, current information. The result would be greater liquidity for such assets across SEC-regulated markets, while simultaneously ensuring that investors are equipped to make informed decisions. Two obvious benefits from this are the trading of digital asset pairs (in which one asset is a security against an asset that is not a security) on SEC-regulated markets, and a disincentive for trading platforms to operate offshore.
This framework would promote transparency and market integrity while allowing innovation to flourish within a regulated environment.
The SEC stands at a pivotal moment in determining the future of crypto asset regulation. The creation of a new crypto task force signals the Commission’s intention to change course from the previous administration. By taking the above crucial steps now, the Commission can begin to rotate away from its historic and heavily contested focus on enforcement efforts and add the much needed regulatory dimension of guidance and practical solutions for investors, fiduciaries, and financial intermediaries. This will better balance protecting investors with fostering capital formation and innovation.
The changes proposed above — ranging from modernizing crowdfunding rules to creating clear standards for custody and ETPs — would reduce ambiguity and support financial innovation in this area. With these adjustments, the SEC can reclaim its purpose and reposition itself as a forward-thinking regulator, ensuring that U.S. markets remain competitive while also safeguarding the public. The long-term future of the U.S. crypto industry will likely require Congress to provide a comprehensive, fit-for-purpose regulatory framework. Until that framework is in place, however, the steps outlined here serve as a way toward appropriate regulation.
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The SEC should provide interpretive guidance for how blockchain projects can distribute crypto assets to participants without being characterized as securities offerings. These distributions are often called “airdrops” or “incentive-based rewards,” and blockchain projects typically conduct them for free, or in exchange for de minimis value, often as a reward for prior usage of the particular network or ecosystem. Such distributions are a critical tool for enabling blockchain projects to build community and progressively decentralize, as they disseminate ownership and control of a project to its users.
This process of decentralization has multiple benefits. Decentralization can guard investors against risks commonly associated with securities and centralized control and to facilitate the expansion of the network, thereby increasing its value. If the SEC were to provide guidance on distributions, it would stem the tide of airdrops and incentive-based rewards only being issued to non-U.S. persons — a trend that is effectively offshoring ownership of blockchain technologies developed in the U.S., and effectively creating windfall gains for non-U.S. persons at the expense of U.S. investors and developers.
The SEC should revise Regulation Crowdfunding rules to more effectively regulate exempt offerings for crypto assets.
The current limits on capital raising and investor participation in crowdfunding campaigns are ill-suited for crypto startups, which often need a broader distribution of crypto assets to develop a critical mass and network effects for their platforms, applications, or protocols.
These changes would empower early-stage crypto projects to access a wide pool of investors, democratizing access to promising investment opportunities while preserving transparency.
The current regulatory environment restricts traditional broker-dealers from engaging meaningfully in the crypto space — primarily because it requires brokers to obtain separate approvals to transact in crypto assets, and imposes even more onerous regulations around broker-dealers who wish to custody crypto assets.
These restrictions create unnecessary barriers to market participation and liquidity. Allowing broker-dealers to facilitate transactions in both crypto assets that are securities, as well as those that are not, would enhance market functionality, investor access, and investor protection. It would also recognize that on crypto platforms today, crypto assets that are clearly not securities (such as bitcoin, ether, or fiat-based stablecoins) trade seamlessly against crypto assets that the SEC may consider to be subject to securities laws.
This approach would promote a safer and more efficient marketplace, enabling broker-dealers to bring their expertise in best execution, compliance, and custody to crypto markets.
Custody and settlement remain critical barriers to institutional adoption of crypto assets. Ambiguity concerning regulatory treatment and accounting rules has deterred traditional financial institutions from entering the custody market. This means that many investors are not getting the benefit of fiduciary asset management for their investments, and instead are left investing on their own and arranging their own custody alternatives.
This clarity would provide the foundation for institutional confidence, enabling larger players to enter the market while also increasing market stability and competition among service providers. Furthermore, crypto investors, both retail and institutional, would receive the protections associated with professional, regulated asset management services.
The SEC should adopt reform measures for exchange-traded products (ETPs) that will foster financial innovation. The proposals promote broader market access to investors and fiduciaries used to managing portfolios of ETPs.
In a decentralized environment where the issuer of a crypto asset may play no significant continuing role, a question arises as to who bears responsibility for providing accurate disclosures around the asset. Fortunately, there exists a helpful analog from the traditional securities markets in the form of Exchange Act Rule 15c2-11, which permits broker-dealers to trade a security so long as there is, among other things, current information for the security available to investors.
Extending that principle into the crypto asset markets, the SEC could permit regulated crypto trading platforms (both exchanges and brokerages) to trade any asset for which the platform can provide investors with accurate, current information. The result would be greater liquidity for such assets across SEC-regulated markets, while simultaneously ensuring that investors are equipped to make informed decisions. Two obvious benefits from this are the trading of digital asset pairs (in which one asset is a security against an asset that is not a security) on SEC-regulated markets, and a disincentive for trading platforms to operate offshore.
This framework would promote transparency and market integrity while allowing innovation to flourish within a regulated environment.
The SEC stands at a pivotal moment in determining the future of crypto asset regulation. The creation of a new crypto task force signals the Commission’s intention to change course from the previous administration. By taking the above crucial steps now, the Commission can begin to rotate away from its historic and heavily contested focus on enforcement efforts and add the much needed regulatory dimension of guidance and practical solutions for investors, fiduciaries, and financial intermediaries. This will better balance protecting investors with fostering capital formation and innovation.
The changes proposed above — ranging from modernizing crowdfunding rules to creating clear standards for custody and ETPs — would reduce ambiguity and support financial innovation in this area. With these adjustments, the SEC can reclaim its purpose and reposition itself as a forward-thinking regulator, ensuring that U.S. markets remain competitive while also safeguarding the public. The long-term future of the U.S. crypto industry will likely require Congress to provide a comprehensive, fit-for-purpose regulatory framework. Until that framework is in place, however, the steps outlined here serve as a way toward appropriate regulation.