- SEC Chair Paul Atkins announced major reforms aimed at modernizing securities laws to support crypto, including new token classification rules and tailored disclosure frameworks.
- The move follows a Trump-aligned working group’s call for immediate regulatory clarity and federal-level authorization of digital asset trading.
- Under Atkins, the SEC has dropped high-profile lawsuits against Coinbase, Binance, and others—marking a clear shift from the Biden administration’s enforcement-heavy approach.
In a major shake-up that’s already sending waves through the crypto world, SEC Chair Paul Atkins just rolled out what might be the most pro-crypto playbook we’ve seen from U.S. regulators. On Thursday, speaking at the America First Policy Institute, Atkins revealed a sweeping plan to rebuild capital markets regulation to actually fit blockchain and crypto—a move industry insiders are calling long overdue.
“This isn’t just regulatory change,” Atkins said, pausing between lines. “This is a generational opportunity.”
Token Clarity, Disclosure Rules & Real-World Utility
Atkins is calling on SEC staff to draft new guidelines to define when a crypto token qualifies as a security, plus proposals for streamlined disclosures and specific exemptions designed for blockchain-based assets. Basically? A new rulebook—written for the tech of today, not the 1930s.
He also wants the SEC to work directly with companies building tokenized securities (think shares or funds issued via blockchain). That means smoother rails for regulated, blockchain-native assets to interact with traditional capital markets—and maybe even the end of regulatory ambiguity that’s plagued the industry for years.
The Trump-Backed Crypto Pivot
All of this comes just a day after a crypto working group formed under President Trump dropped a report pushing for tailored crypto laws and a fast-track to get digital assets federally cleared for trading. The White House, backing that push, encouraged both the SEC and CFTC to use their existing powers to make it happen—immediately.
The contrast between the current approach and the last administration couldn’t be sharper. Biden-era regulators, especially under Gary Gensler, went heavy-handed—filing lawsuits against Coinbase, Binance, and other major players. But under Atkins? Those cases have already been dropped, signaling a very clear shift in tone and direction.
A Window for Crypto to Step Up
Atkins is betting big on blockchain. By pushing the SEC to work with crypto-native projects instead of against them, he’s inviting the industry to build within the system—not around it.
“This is more than policy,” Atkins said. “It’s about ensuring the next wave of innovation happens here, in the U.S., not overseas.”
Whether that promise pans out remains to be seen, but one thing’s for sure—Project Crypto, regulatory revamps, and White House backing are painting a very different picture than what we saw just a year ago.