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#SEC Chair Paul Atkins walked onto the stage at the AI+ Expo in Washington on Friday and laid out the clearest regulatory blueprint the crypto industry has seen in years. The Commission is preparing formal rulemaking across four specific areas: onchain trading systems, broker-dealer definitions, clearing and settlement, and crypto yield vaults . This is the shift from enforcement theater to actual rulebooks, and the timing matters.
The core problem Atkins identified is structural. Existing securities laws were written for a world of separate intermediaries. Brokers handle orders. Exchanges match trades. Clearinghouses settle. But a single blockchain protocol can execute a trade, manage collateral, route liquidity, run yield strategies through vault structures, and settle the transaction, all within seconds . Software does not organize itself neatly into regulatory boxes built in the 1930s.
๐น Exchange definitions are under review. The SEC will launch notice-and-comment rulemaking to clarify how exchange rules apply to onchain trading platforms
๐น Broker-dealer rules may shift. Atkins said the agency is considering exemptive rulemaking for software interfaces and wallet applications that facilitate transactions without custody
๐น Clearing frameworks face rethinking. When settlement is near-instant and counterparty risk is managed algorithmically, the traditional clearing agency model requires fresh analysis
๐น Crypto vaults are now on the formal agenda. The SEC is assessing how onchain yield products fit under the Securities Act and Investment Advisers Act
๐น Atkins explicitly urged Congress to advance the #CLARITYAct to President Trump's desk, calling legislation the strongest way to future-proof the regulatory framework
โซ๏ธ Industry response was immediate. The DeFi Education Fund called the remarks "powerful." The Hyperliquid Policy Center said it was encouraged to see a Chairman willing to map systems to existing frameworks on their own terms rather than force them into legacy boxes
โซ๏ธ Under previous leadership the SEC relied on lawsuits to define rules. Atkins is emphasizing guidance, staff statements, and formal rulemaking with public input
โซ๏ธ Last month the Division of Trading and Markets already stated that DeFi wallet interfaces would generally not be considered brokers
โซ๏ธ Senators Warren and Van Hollen pushed back, sending a letter expressing concern that the SEC's interpretive releases grant sweeping exemptions that benefit the crypto industry at the expense of investor protections
The strategic pivot is not subtle. Atkins said the agency's role is to set the rules of play, not pick the winning team . That framing alone signals a departure from the posture that defined the previous era. The SEC has already released a taxonomy classifying digital assets into five categories, and the chair has floated an innovation exemption for tokenized securities . The Division of Trading and Markets has issued staff guidance narrowing who counts as a broker. Each step stacks toward a regulatory architecture built for blockchain infrastructure rather than stretched to cover it.
The CLARITY Act remains the larger prize. Atkins described legislation as the only way to lock in the framework beyond any single administration . He noted that the SEC can act flexibly under existing authority, but that authority is ultimately bound by statutes from the 1930s. A new law shared between the SEC and CFTC would create a regulatory perimeter that survives political cycles and court challenges. Senator Lummis expects committee progress in May and a Senate vote by June .
For crypto markets the signal is meaningful. A rulemaking process that clarifies exchange definitions and broker obligations reduces legal uncertainty for developers, protocols, and exchanges operating in the United States. The treatment of crypto vaults matters for every yield product in DeFi. The rethinking of clearing frameworks affects tokenized securities and institutional onboarding. This is the infrastructure layer of regulatory clarity, and it is being built in public through notice-and-comment rather than through Wells notices.
Atkins is drawing the map. The question now is how fast the pieces move through rulemaking, whether Congress delivers the statutory backbone, and whether the industry engages seriously with the process. The window is open. For the first time in years the SEC is asking for input instead of filing lawsuits. That is not the whole solution. But it is the foundation of one.
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