A U.S. Crypto Regulatory Primer

The recent passage of U.S. crypto regulatory policies follows on the heels of a long, convoluted path to bringing categorization and frameworks to digital assets in the U.S. With more legislation currently before Senate, the implications for digital assets and asset managers are wide ranging.

The Winding Path to Now

For years, the SEC skirted the creation of digital asset regulation, citing the unique risks of digital assets to investors. Instead, the regulatory body’s crypto rulemaking arrived in the form of crackdowns, whack-a-mole style. Firms and asset managers learned the hard way what wasn’t allowed in regards to digital asset investing in the U.S., without ever really understanding what, if anything, was permissible.

Congress attempted to pass the Financial Innovation and Technology for the 21st Century Act (FIT21) in 2021. The regulation sought to better define which agencies have jurisdiction over specific digital assets (SEC versus CFTC). Additionally, it worked to cement what digital assets were classified as commodities and which were securities. Notably, stablecoins would only fall under SEC and CFTC oversight in very narrow instances.

FIT21 also created new requirements that brokers and dealers of digital assets, clearing agencies, and platforms must register as intermediaries with the SEC or CFTC. While it passed with bipartisan support in the House, it later fizzled in the Senate.

Signs of Changing Crypto Tides in the U.S.