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SEC Opens 27-Question Review of Novel ETFs, Puts Crypto Products in Focus
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) asked the public on June 30, 2026, to weigh in on how it regulates exchange-traded funds built around crypto assets, event contracts, and other nontraditional holdings.
Key Takeaways:
SEC Opens Review With 27 Questions
The agency published Release No. 33-11426, a formal request for comment that poses 27 questions but proposes no specific rule changes. The filing is listed under File No. S7-2026-24 and carries Securities Act, Exchange Act, and Investment Company Act release numbers tied to the same review.
Bitcoin.com News reviewed the release. It groups the questions into three sections covering fund status under federal law, the mechanics of the ETF rule itself, and the timeline sponsors face when registering new products.
Atkins Cites Tripled ETF Assets
SEC Chairman Paul Atkins set the stage for the request in a statement on May 20, 2026. He said ETFs have served as a major driver of innovation in the securities markets and noted that fund assets have roughly tripled since 2019.
Atkins added that “novel products raise novel questions.” He thanked sponsors for agreeing to delay launches of event contract ETFs while the commission reviews the category.
Sponsors Pause Two Dozen Filings
That pause came after Roundhill, Bitwise, and Graniteshares filed roughly two dozen ETFs tied to election outcomes, economic data, and other binary events. Those filings stopped moving forward voluntarily after the May statement.
The request names crypto assets and blockchain-enabled strategies directly alongside event contracts as examples of novel categories under review.
SEC Tests Three Rules
Three areas frame the inquiry. The first asks whether funds holding mostly non-securities assets, including some crypto assets viewed as commodities, still count as investment companies under the Investment Company Act of 1940.
The second area covers Rule 6c-11, the 2019 rule that created a standard path for most ETFs to list without individual exemptive orders. The SEC wants to know if the rule’s arbitrage and disclosure conditions hold up for novel holdings.
The third area covers Rule 485, which lets routine ETF registration updates take effect automatically within 60 to 75 days. The commission is asking whether that timeline gives staff enough room to review complex or first-of-their-kind products, or whether sponsors need a separate track for novel filings.
Bitcoin ETFs Keep Trading
Existing spot bitcoin and ether ETFs are not the direct target of the review. Those products already operate under generic listing standards approved in 2025 and continue trading with established creation and redemption processes.
Sponsors weighing new crypto-linked products, including those built around staking, tokenized assets, or additional altcoins, face a different picture. Any filing that pushes into untested territory could draw closer scrutiny under whatever framework follows this review.
Comment Window Opens
The comment window runs 60 days after the release appears in the Federal Register. Comments can go through the SEC‘s online form, by email to rule-comments@sec.gov, or by mail to the agency’s Washington office.
All comments submitted become part of the public record. The SEC has not set a date for any follow-up rulemaking and will review submissions before deciding on next steps.