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Home » The SEC just gave crypto its clearest win in years, but much of it could still be reversed
The SEC just gave crypto its clearest win in years, but much of it could still be reversed

The SEC just gave crypto its clearest win in years, but much of it could still be reversed

March 23, 20266 Mins ReadNo Comments Regulations
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The crypto industry finally got the clear lines it spent years demanding from Washington.

Six days after the SEC and CFTC unveiled their new crypto framework, the policy is now moving into the formal publication process through the Federal Register, giving the market a clearer sense of what this week’s regulatory reset actually is and what it still is not.

On Mar. 17, the SEC and CFTC said most crypto assets are not securities, drew a formal taxonomy, and handed staking, airdrops, mining, and wrapped tokens more breathing room than the market has seen in years.

However, the new framework is an interpretive rule that creates no new legal obligations, takes effect without notice-and-comment, and comes with an explicit reservation: the Commission may refine, revise, or expand the interpretation once public comment concludes.

Chair Paul Atkins said the announcement was “a beginning, not an end.” He has also said that only Congress can genuinely future-proof the rulebook. Both things are true simultaneously, and the tension between them is the actual story of this week.

What the agencies actually did

The Mar. 17 release is a genuine break from the era of former chair Gary Gensler.

The SEC formally stated that most crypto assets are not securities, and only tokenized versions of traditional securities fall squarely within the securities bucket.

It also created a five-part taxonomy covering proof-of-work mining, staking, wrapping, covered airdrops, and the treatment of non-security assets that were once offered under investment contracts.

That last point carries real weight: the release states that a non-security crypto asset need not remain tied to an investment contract in perpetuity, and it describes how that separation can occur.

Secondary market trading is one of the most consequential developments in years.

Since the announcement, the framework has started moving into the formal publication process through the Federal Register, while the CFTC has followed with a no-action position for Phantom’s self-custodial wallet software and a set of crypto and blockchain FAQs published on Mar. 20. That does not turn interpretation into statute, but it does show the agencies are trying to operationalize the new posture quickly.

The CFTC joined the release and said it would administer the Commodity Exchange Act in a manner consistent with the SEC’s interpretation.

The two agencies signed a new MOU on Mar. 11 and created a Joint Harmonization Initiative. On paper, Washington’s two main financial regulators are more aligned on crypto than at any point in the asset class’s history.

The release also formally supersedes the SEC staff’s 2019 Framework for Investment Contract Analysis of Digital Assets, which the industry has identified as the source of the greatest regulatory ambiguity.

Commission-level interpretation replacing staff guidance is a meaningful upgrade. This is not a speech. It is not a one-off no-action letter. It carries the weight of a Commission acting collectively.

Formal publication and follow-on staff guidance improve visibility and compliance planning, but they do not move the framework onto statutory ground. They make the policy easier to use today, not harder to reverse tomorrow.

Why the win has a ceiling

The durability ladder runs from most permanent to least, and most of this week’s relief sits toward the bottom.

At the top is the statute and binding court doctrine. The Howey test still governs investment contract analysis, and the SEC explicitly preserved it.

The GENIUS Act stablecoin lane, enacted Jul. 18, sits on statutory ground. Those parts of this week’s picture are genuinely hard for a future Commission to erase.

Below that is the Commission interpretation. Stronger than staff guidance, but the release itself says it is revisable. The taxonomy categories, the staking and airdrop and wrapping interpretations, and the investment-contract-separation concept are all Commission readings of existing law, not a congressional rewrite of it.

Below that is the inter-agency infrastructure. The SEC-CFTC MOU creates no legally binding obligations, and either party may terminate it with 30 days’ written notice. Agencies aligned today are a political fact, not a legal one.

At the bottom is the staff relief. The Phantom no-action position and the Mar. 20 FAQs are the easiest layer to unwind. They are useful now but structurally fragile.

The gap between where investors feel relief and where legal permanence actually resides is the core vulnerability of this week’s framework.

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SEC commissioners serve staggered five-year terms, one ending each Jun. 5, with roughly 18 months of holdover eligibility if a replacement is not confirmed.

The CFTC operates on the same staggered structure. A future administration needs 12 to 24 months to reshape both commissions, but the chair can move faster without a full Commission vote on every decision.

Atkins acknowledged this directly in November 2025, saying there will always be a risk that a future Commission could reverse course. His February testimony to the House Financial Services Committee was sharper: no SEC action can future-proof the rulebook as effectively as market structure legislation.

He repeated the point on Mar. 17, the same day the release landed.

One of the architects of crypto’s biggest regulatory win in years spent part of that day publicly explaining why the win is incomplete.

The European contrast

The bull case requires Congress. Senate market structure legislation introduced in January would convert today’s interpretive bridge into a statutory framework, defining when tokens are securities or commodities and handing the CFTC spot market authority.

If that bill clears, exchange access, token classification, and the staking and airdrop treatments move from Commission interpretation onto ground that a future chair cannot revise with a memo.

Atkins’ own promised safe-harbor-style rulemaking would be a meaningful intermediate step: formal rulemaking builds a thicker administrative record than an interpretive release, making any future rollback procedurally heavier even if not impossible.

The bear case requires only that Congress stay stuck. The Senate stablecoin bill stalled in February, despite recent signs of progress.

If market structure legislation follows the same path, the industry’s new clarity rests entirely on the current Commission’s willingness to hold the line.

Citi already priced that risk by cutting its 12-month Bitcoin target to $112,000 from $143,000, specifically because US legislation had stalled, with a recessionary bear case at $58,000.

Wall Street is already distinguishing between good guidance and durable law.

The contrast is becoming clearer in another way too. The SEC has also approved Nasdaq rule changes to support tokenized settlement for certain already-regulated securities, reinforcing the idea that Washington is increasingly comfortable with blockchain inside familiar market infrastructure even while much of crypto still rests on revisable interpretation rather than durable statute.

The EU’s MiCA regime has been in force since December 2024, with stablecoin rules in place since mid-2024, creating a statutory bloc-wide framework for crypto-asset service providers.

America’s core question is still permanence. Crypto won the agencies, but it has not yet won the law.

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