March 23, 2025
Crypto

The SEC Resets Its Crypto Relationship


The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is looking to reset its relationship with the crypto industry, even before a permanent chair is confirmed by Congress. The latest effort was Friday’s roundtable, hosted at the SEC’s headquarters in Washington, D.C. and featuring a dozen attorneys representing different views and positions within the crypto industry.

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The narrative

The SEC’s reset began when Acting Chair Mark Uyeda launched a crypto task force and oversaw his agency withdraw Staff Accounting Bulletin 121, drop a number of ongoing lawsuits, pause a few more and publish multiple staff statements about how the agency might look at memecoins and proof-of-work mining.

Why it matters

The SEC is arguably the most important federal regulator in crypto at the moment. While its sister agency, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, may be the regulator that might one day oversee crypto spot markets, right now it’s the SEC that most companies in the sector look to for guidance on what, exactly, it is they can do.

Breaking it down

The roundtable was split into two portions (three, if you count introductory remarks from the three commissioners): A roughly 90-minute moderated panel discussion, led by former SEC Commissioner and Paredes Strategies founder Troy Paredes, and a 90-minute town hall still moderated by Paredes but featuring questions from the general public.

You can read CoinDesk’s coverage of the panel discussion at this link.

Though the central question during the discussion was — as it has been for years — when and how exactly is a crypto or crypto transaction a security, panelists touched on everything from the role of crypto in boosting ransomware to how exactly companies should operate.

Chris Brummer, the CEO of Bluprynt and professor at Georgetown Law, opened up the discussion with his analysis of what the Howey Test actually means: We’re basically saying when you have savings, there’s an issue of investor protection. The common enterprise prong that we’re all familiar with is really addressing a kind of providing problem.”

“It really just goes to information asymmetries, and then the question of profits goes to investor psychology, greed and fear, the kinds of things that can distort decision-making,” he said. “And basically, when you have all those factors together, you have a mandated disclosure [rule].”

The SEC’s approach thus far has limited a number of crypto projects, Delphi Ventures General Counsel Sarah Brennan said. While many crypto projects are intended to have a broad initial distribution, “the specter of the applications of securities laws” means many projects act more like they’ll go public than actually embrace the crypto aspects of their projects.

“We see more and more the token is the product … there’s different ways that people are artificially supporting price and it’s generally been, I’d say, sort of toxic to the market,” she said.

John Reed Stark, a former SEC attorney, said that the “economic reality of the transaction” is critical.

“However you want to look at it, the people buying crypto are not collectors,” he said. “We all know that they’re investors, and the mission of the SEC is to protect investors.”

It remains to be seen how the SEC’s efforts will continue, but the agency is taking a more active role in publicly engaging with these questions and the industry seems to be responding. The SEC auditorium was about three-quarters full at times, to say nothing of anyone who tuned into the livestream.

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Tuesday

  • 15:30 UTC (11:30 a.m. ET) The federal judge overseeing the U.S. Department of Justice’s case against Samourai Wallet’s founders held a status conference hearing in the case. Per my colleague Cheyenne Ligon, who attended, the 7-minute long hearing addressed a few procedural matters but did not delve into the substance of the case.

Thursday

Friday

  • 17:00 UTC (1:00 p.m. ET) The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission held a roundtable event with legal experts from the crypto industry and SEC staff.
  • (Reuters) Another strain of bird flu — this time H7N9 — has hit the U.S. for the first time since 2017. This is on top of the ongoing H5N1 epidemic.
  • (CNN) Amtrak CEO Stephen Gardner said he would be stepping down from leading the quasi-public transit company at the White House’s direction.
  • (Bloomberg) Coinbase is in advanced talks to acquire derivatives platform Deribit, Bloomberg reported, following CoinDesk’s reporting last month that the exchange was interested in the firm.
  • (Wired) A former Meta employee wrote a tell-all book about her experiences at the company and Meta is going all out to limit its distribution. Careless People has since risen to become a best-seller on Amazon.
  • (Bloomberg) Bloomberg profiled New York Democrat Kirsten Gillibrand’s role in pushing for crypto legislation in the Senate.
  • (Politico) The Trump administration’s plans for USAID include reforming it and “leverag[ing] blockchain technology to secure transactions,” though this document Politico obtained does not include a lot more detail. “All distributions would also be secured and traced via blockchain technology to radically increase security, transparency and traceability,” the document says. If you’re one of the individuals pushing for blockchain integration with the U.S. government, let’s chat.
  • (The Guardian) The Trump administration renditioned more than 200 men of Venezuelan origin to an El Salvadorian prison, potentially in violation of a court order and without holding any hearings or trials. While the administration said in public statements that all 238 men had ties to the Tren de Aragua gang which in turn was taking direction from Venezuela’s government, officials said in court documents that many of the people flown to El Salvador did not have criminal records. Family members of many of these individuals say they were not criminals and did not have gang ties. Some of the individuals reportedly signed deportation papers and expected to be flown back to Venezuela. U.S. intelligence agencies seemingly also found that TdA was not tied to the Venezuelan government, the Times reported.
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If you’ve got thoughts or questions on what I should discuss next week or any other feedback you’d like to share, feel free to email me at nik@coindesk.com or find me on Bluesky @nikhileshde.bsky.social.

You can also join the group conversation on Telegram.

See ya’ll next week!





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