SEC Roundtable: Successes, Failures, and Next Steps
Original Article Title: SEC Roundtable: Hits, Misses and What's Next
Article Authors: Prathik Desai, Nameet Potnis, Thejaswini M A
Article Translation: Block Unicorn
Four days after the roundtable ended, the industry is beginning to question whether this will pave the way for a new era of crypto regulation or simply redefine the same old challenges.
Last Friday, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) took the first step in easing tensions with the cryptocurrency industry but fell short of providing all the answers the industry was hoping for.
After years of a "law enforcement-first" approach, the securities regulatory agency convened industry heavyweights for the first time to hold a cryptocurrency roundtable, touted as a "spring sprint towards crypto clarity."
Despite the hopeful title, attendees spent a significant amount of time during the two-hour meeting debating the decades-old Howey Test standard rather than a clearly defined regulatory path.
The meeting indeed had its takeaways— but are they sufficient? This article will explore the significance of this regulatory shift for the crypto industry:
· How the SEC acknowledges past failures but still struggles to define a future direction
· What the proposed DART tracking system means for transparency
· Why NFTs could be the next area to receive regulatory guidance
· What crucial industry elements were missing from the discussion
New Leadership, New Regulatory Approach
The SEC's governing styles around the end of the Trump administration's second term are starkly contrasting. Former Chairman Gary Gensler had declared most cryptocurrencies as securities and enforcement as the primary tool, while Acting Chairman Mark Uyeda and Commissioner Hester Peirce acknowledged the need for collaborative efforts to revamp the regulatory framework at the start of the meeting.
"I think we are poised for the sprint ahead," Peirce told attendees, mentioning the task force's ambitious "spring sprint towards crypto clarity" plan.
"Can we translate the features of securities into a concise classification system to cover the various existing and potentially emerging types of crypto assets?" This was one of the questions Peirce raised in addressing the dilemma of treating cryptocurrencies as securities.
This open dialogue invitation marks a shift in the SEC's stance.
The roundtable event invited over a dozen securities lawyers and cryptocurrency experts, including prominent figures such as Miles Jennings, A16z's Director of Cryptocurrency Policy and Legal Counsel, who belong to the supportive camp, as well as critics like former SEC lawyer John Reed Stark.
However, the most noteworthy development was the SEC's candid admission that its previous approaches had failed.
Miles Jennings, A16z's Director of Cryptocurrency Policy and Legal Counsel, put it bluntly. "The prior administration's regulatory approach to the industry did not further any of the SEC's goals—neither investor protection nor capital formation nor market efficiency. As such, the current approach is clearly a failure and we must improve." What is even more surprising is that the SEC appears to agree with this view.
Old Issues, Limited Progress
Despite the new faces in attendance and a very cordial atmosphere, the roundtable quickly delved into a familiar debate: how to determine the security nature using the 1946 Howey Test?
Throughout almost the entire discussion, participants debated how this nearly 80-year-old orange grove framework applied to tokens, decentralized exchanges, and other crypto innovations.
For an industry looking to break free from the past entirely, this focus on improving old tools rather than building new ones left many disappointed.
"Crypto optimists (advocates) believe that relying on current law and the never-ending Howey test rulings is not a viable regulatory regime," noted crypto lawyer Bill Hughes in an article on X.
The industry is hoping for a fresh start—defining what is a security, what is not a security—rather than endlessly applying outdated precedents.
This tension played out in real-time, with some participants attempting to steer the conversation toward a more forward-looking approach. Rodrigo Seira, Special Advisor at Cooley LLP, questioned the fundamental premise that investment intent automatically results in a security. "I think we must understand that just because there is an investment intent behind a purchase does not mean that the transaction automatically becomes a security," Seira stated, using the example of purchasing art with both aesthetic and investment value. While the conversation remained focused on the definition of securities, subtle hints of more practical progress emerged on the fringes of the event.
Commissioner Peirce told reporters off the record that, following a recent statement about Meme coins and proof-of-work mining, Non-Fungible Tokens (NFTs) could be the next category to receive SEC guidance. Peirce said, "I think we will see, in the NFT space as well, guidance coming out."
This offhand remark has significant implications for projects like Stoner Cats and Flyfish Club, which have faced SEC lawsuits in the past for using NFT sales to fund their ventures. Formal clarification could open the door for creators to use NFTs as a legitimate fundraising tool without the need for securities registration.
DART System: The Quiet Revolution of Transparency
Aside from specific outcomes of the roundtable, there was something else truly noteworthy—a parallel development that could fundamentally reshape the landscape of crypto transactions reporting.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's recently announced Digital Asset Reporting and Tracking System (DART) will change how regulatory bodies monitor the crypto market. Unlike the philosophical debate around the Howey Test, DART represents a pragmatic approach to addressing one of the SEC's core issues: transparency.
The proposed system will not only track on-chain transactions of public blockchains but also trace private off-chain transactions, providing a comprehensive view of cross-platform digital asset ownership. This addresses a long-standing regulatory blind spot—while transactions on DeFi protocols are publicly visible on-chain, centralized exchanges often process transactions internally without recording them on the blockchain.
The SEC statement reads, "Digital asset securities transactions—whether 'on-chain' or 'off-chain'—must comply with transaction reporting requirements similar to standard securities."
What makes DART particularly significant is that it was developed in collaboration with the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)—a stark difference from the roundtable where CFTC representation was absent, despite both the CFTC and DART sharing oversight of digital assets.
This cross-agency collaboration signals that beneath the surface of public debates, regulatory bodies are quietly advancing towards a more unified regulatory framework. For the crypto industry long plagued by regulatory fragmentation, this pragmatic cooperation may ultimately achieve a regulatory synergy that roundtables and public speeches could not.
However, the DART system has also raised serious privacy concerns. By simultaneously capturing public blockchain data and private off-chain transaction activities, the system grants regulators unprecedented monitoring capabilities over the cryptocurrency market. For traders who value the anonymity of blockchain transactions, this heightened surveillance signals a significant shift in cryptocurrency regulation towards traditional financial monitoring practices.
Industry observers are closely watching how the DART system will balance transparency goals with privacy protection needs—and whether this system will spur a new wave of privacy protection technology innovation.
Final Thoughts
Four days after the roundtable meeting concluded, the industry began to wonder whether this would pave the way for a new era of crypto regulation or just redefine the same old challenges.
The SEC's Crypto 2.0 plan led by Commissioner Peirce has set a new tone. Staff statements on meme coins and mining, upcoming potential NFT guidance, and the agency's willingness to engage directly with the industry all indicate a substantial change in approach.
The timing is particularly crucial—the U.S. Congress is advancing legislation similar to last year's "FIT21 Act," which would establish a new framework for classifying digital assets. Renowned attorney Renato Mariotti noted, "The missed opportunity of Friday's roundtable failed to influence this legislative process by nurturing innovative ideas with long-term regulatory value."
While Commissioner Peirce's "spring sprint" plan signals a shift in regulatory thinking from an "enforcement-first" approach to a more open stance, Friday's discussions remained entrenched in decades-old frameworks rather than building a regulatory system adapted to the new era.
Given institutional constraints, the emergence of such a compromise solution is not surprising.
Currently operating with only three commissioners, the SEC is awaiting Thursday's confirmation hearing for Paul Atkins, leaving the SEC lacking both the statutory authority to drive comprehensive reform and the corresponding mechanisms for safeguarding. At this stage, it can only implement limited regulatory measures through non-binding staff statements on meme coins and mining activities.
While the proposed DART system represents the most substantial progress—through collaboration with the CFTC, it aims to establish an unprecedented transparency mechanism in the cryptocurrency market—its essence is still to apply the traditional financial regulatory paradigm to emerging financial formats.
The most fatal flaw of the current regulatory system lies in its response time. Blockchain innovation iterates at the speed of code deployment, while SEC decisions are constrained by the slow process of committee consensus. This ever-widening "regulatory innovation deficit" has become the industry's unspoken core contradiction.
Cryptocurrency companies navigating through the regulatory fog should recognize their strategic direction: true transformative power comes from congressional legislation, not roundtable discussions. Rather than endlessly debating how the "Howey Test" applies to digital assets, the "FIT21 Act" clearly offers a more constructive regulatory framework.
The current so-called "Spring Sprint" is more like a cautious stroll—better than standing still, but ultimately hard to catch up with the full-speed industry train.
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