Crypto World News reports that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is preparing an important tokenization policy aimed at providing some regulatory flexibility for companies seeking to tokenize securities (such as corporate stocks). However, this still does not meet the crypto industry's expectations for a permanent policy. The SEC may pursue formal tokenization rulemaking, but currently prefers to exercise its existing exemptions, planning to temporarily allow companies to put assets on the blockchain to test potential financial innovations. SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce stated that the SEC has exemptions it can use. Although Congress has not yet introduced a new clear legislation for the digital asset market, the SEC is actively pursuing its own clarity regarding tokenization and other crypto policy directives.

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GateUser-04e4dac2
· 5h ago
Whether companies dare to enter the market still depends on how the exemption rights are granted; right now, it's all talk.
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GateUser-3f3455c7
· 5h ago
The phrase "testing financial innovation" sounds familiar, Sandbox 2.0?
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TokenomicsTailor
· 5h ago
Permanent policy? With Congress's pace, it would be good if it comes out by 2030.
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LeverageWithdrawalInProgress
· 5h ago
SEC's move seems like giving a temporary trial period for tokenization; we'll see if it becomes permanent.
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雾里看TVL
· 5h ago
Hester Peirce can finally put it to good use—her exemption is stronger than that of Congress in countries like Hester?
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