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Elliptic Points to Major Regulatory Shift After SEC Releases Comprehensive Crypto Guidance - Crypto Economy
TL;DR
The SEC’s new attempt to define which crypto-assets fall inside securities law is already being read as more than a technical memo. For Elliptic, this looks like a decisive change in regulatory posture. The blockchain analytics firm argues that the March 17 interpretation gives exchanges, custodians and developers a clearer operating map after years of policy ambiguity. Just as important, the guidance arrived alongside a formal agreement with the CFTC, signaling a more coordinated model that leans toward structured oversight and innovation rather than a regime dominated almost by enforcement-first uncertainty in the United States.
Where the SEC Now Draws the Lines
The guidance matters because it tries to separate crypto categories instead of treating the sector as one blurred risk bucket. At the center is a more practical reading of the Howey Test. An asset sale falls under securities rules when money is placed into a common enterprise with an expectation of profit tied mainly to promoters or third parties. But once those managerial obligations are completed or abandoned, the analysis can end. Value driven by network use, demand or community activity instead points away from securities treatment and toward a clearer compliance path for participants.

The classification lines themselves are strikingly concrete. The clearest message is that decentralization and function now matter more in the SEC’s framing. Bitcoin, Ether, Solana and XRP on secondary markets are treated as digital commodities rather than securities, while NFTs linked to art, music, trading cards or gaming items generally stay outside that perimeter unless promoted with profit expectations. Utility tokens for access, membership, tickets or credentials are also excluded. Stablecoins issued by authorized entities under the GENIUS Act are non-securities when used for payments, but tokenized stocks and bonds remain squarely inside securities law.
For firms trying to build products, the commercial implication is immediate. What changes most is the amount of ambiguity standing between crypto businesses and execution. Institutions can approach custody and trading of digital commodities with greater confidence under CFTC jurisdiction, even as tokenized securities continue to require disclosures and registrations. Routine blockchain activities such as mining, staking, wrapping tokens and certain airdrops on non-security networks also avoid securities status when they lack fundraising or investment-of-money features. That does not eliminate diligence, but it does give developers, exchanges and compliance teams a more usable rulebook today.