U.S SEC issues first-ever definitions for what crypto assets are securities
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission shared the informal guidance it'll use to classify crypto securities alongside its sister agency overseeing commodities.
By Jesse Hamilton|Edited by Nikhilesh DeUpdated Mar 17, 2026, 8:36 p.m. Published Mar 17, 2026, 8:28 p.m.
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What to know:
- The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission issued guidance explaining how it will define cryptocurrencies as securities, creating several categories of digital assets.
- Just one category includes digital securities, which in SEC Chairman Paul Aktins' words, returns the agency to its core focus of only overseeing securities markets.
- “For far too long, American builders, innovators, and entrepreneurs have awaited clear guidance on the status of crypto assets under the federal securities and commodity laws,” said CFTC Chairman Mike Selig, who also spoke Tuesday.
For the first time, the U.S Securities and Exchange Commission has sought to clearly define different types of crypto assets and how the regulator will approach them, issuing those new standards Tuesday alongside its sister agency that's responsible for commodities.
The SEC's interpretive guidance, which doesn't yet carry the weight of a formal new rule, has been promised by its new leader, Chairman Paul Atkins, put in place by President Donald Trump. And it was issued in partnership with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, just days after the two agencies agreed on a formal relationship in which they plan to regulate crypto and other industries as close partners.
“After more than a decade of uncertainty, this interpretation will provide market participants with a clear understanding of how the Commission treats crypto assets under federal securities laws," Atkins said in a statement.
The previous chairman of the SEC, Democratic appointee Gary Gensler, had declined to commit to tailored policies for the crypto sector, leaving a longstanding gap in its regulator certainty in the world's most important market.
Atkins said the new "token taxonomy" interpretation on Tuesday takes a stance that Gensler's agency refused to: "Most crypto assets are not themselves securities."
He said in remarks at the Digital Chamber's DC Blockchain Summit that the SEC created four categories of tokens.
"The interpretation then clarifies that only one crypto asset class remains subject to securities laws, namely digital securities, which are traditional securities in new technology," he said. "This distinction returns the SEC to its core mission and statutory authority of protecting investors involved in securities transactions."
Additionally, those investment contracts that are securities don't necessarily keep that status permanently, he said.
"We're not the securities and everything commission anymore," he said Tuesday at the Digital Chamber's DC Blockchain Summit, just minutes after releasing the new standard. The line drew enthusiastic applause from the crypto crowd.
The guidance seeks to define digital commodities, digital collectibles, digital tools, stablecoins and digital securities. It also clarifies how U.S. securities laws should treat airdrops, protocol mining, protocol staking and the wrapping non-security crypto assets.
“For far too long, American builders, innovators, and entrepreneurs have awaited clear guidance on the status of crypto assets under the federal securities and commodity laws,” said CFTC Chairman Mike Selig.
Atkins said that the legislation being devised in Congress to establish new crypto laws will be the only way to guarantee the permanence of pro-digital assets policy shifts.
In the new guidance, the commission is saying that a digital asset becomes a security when its issuer offers it as an investment in a common enterprise that comes with promises of profits based on the management's efforts. Such an investment contract ends, though, when "either the issuer has fulfilled its representations or promises or the issuer has failed to satisfy its representations or promises," at which point it wouldn't be regulated as a security anymore.
The agency says its reach into digital securities does not include airdrops, protocol staking and protocol mining.
The CFTC's Selig said his agency was also signing on to the same taxonomy, as part of the two agencies' push toward "harmonization."
"I think the signal is clear now that it's time to build in the United States," he said.
UPDATE (March 17, 2026, 20:35 UTC): Adds additional detail.
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