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Home Crypto

The SEC Finally Admits Its Role in America’s Crypto Regulatory Mess

by Anindya Paul
March 13, 2026
in Crypto
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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For years, cryptocurrency companies operating in the United States have voiced a persistent complaint: they are being regulated to death by multiple agencies simultaneously. Now, the government is finally admitting the industry was right all along. The SEC (Securities and Exchange Commission) and CFTC (Commodity Futures Trading Commission) have enacted a key change in policy as they have now formalized their operating framework regarding the oversight of cryptocurrencies, derivatives market products, and hybrid products through the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU).

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Ending the Regulatory Turf Wars

This is a landmark agreement; the SEC Chair Paul Atkins has publicly admitted within the last few weeks that the SEC’s lengthy record of engaging in “regulatory turf wars,” overlapping rules, etc., created an environment where the U.S. evolving digital asset marketplace was forced to operate outside of the U.S. and being regulated from other jurisdictions. The Chair’s candid remarks, however, go way beyond just being a routine procedural matter; they transform the SEC’s lengthy history of indecision regarding U.S. regulation of digital assets into an objectively verifiable historical event based upon the Chair’s public recognition of the fact that America has a massive crisis in digital asset innovation, as this regulatory crisis is not solely attributable to companies attempting to navigate the U.S. regulatory system, but is ultimately due to the current regulatory structure in place in the U.S.

What the New Agreement Actually Does

While this new MOU does not magically rewrite existing securities or commodities laws, it fundamentally changes how the government operates behind the scenes. The agreement establishes mandatory regular meetings between the two agencies, on-request data sharing, and cross-training for staff. More importantly, it mandates coordinated exams and joint consultations on enforcement actions. For crypto firms that interact with both agencies, this means an end to the bureaucratic nightmare of satisfying two completely separate regulatory tracks for a single business operation.

A Broader Look at U.S. Market Plumbing

The push for harmonization did not happen overnight. The agencies spent months building their case publicly, hosting joint roundtables that mixed crypto-native startups with traditional financial titans like Nasdaq, J.P. Morgan, and Bank of America. This diverse mix proves that the agreement reaches far beyond just Bitcoin policy. Regulators are finally treating crypto as part of a much broader problem regarding U.S. market plumbing, recognizing that modern markets have become highly convergent, globalized, and heavily dependent on digital, on-chain infrastructure.

Where the First Changes Will Appear

Everyday retail traders likely won’t see an immediate impact on their portfolio apps, but the institutional effects will be profound. The clearest near-term changes will appear in product handling and market infrastructure. For example, regulators are currently exploring cross-margining, which would allow trading firms to use their collateral much more efficiently across connected products rather than locking up extra capital in separate regulatory buckets. Furthermore, complex products like margined spot crypto and true crypto-perpetuals will now be evaluated jointly, rather than sitting unresolved for months while agencies fight over jurisdiction.

The Scorecard for Success

Despite the optimistic tone, the agreement still leaves room for skepticism. The MOU frequently uses non-binding language such as “endeavor” and “where appropriate.” The true test of this regulatory truce will not be another press release, but tangible, real-world results. The crypto industry is eagerly waiting for the first concrete before-and-after example—perhaps a complex product filing that moves significantly faster, or a coordinated regulatory exam that replaces two separate, agonizing audits. If the SEC and CFTC can successfully narrow their overlap, they will finally make the United States a competitive and cost-effective place to build the future of digital finance.

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Anindya Paul

Professional content creator with strong expertise in content writing, filmmaking and social media strategy. Skilled in digital storytelling, scriptwriting, video production, sound design and graphic design - crafting compelling narratives across platforms. Known for delivering high-quality, engaging content under tight deadlines. A collaborative team player with a sharp creative instinct, adaptability to evolving trends, and a focus on impactful, results-driven communication.

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