The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has signaled that certain Bitcoin miner hosting services may fall under federal securities laws. The position emerged in a newly filed enforcement action, which focuses on how some hosted mining arrangements are structured rather than on Bitcoin mining itself.
The case centers on whether investors were sold passive profit opportunities that depend primarily on a company’s efforts. As a result, the complaint draws a clear line between direct participation in mining and investment-style hosting contracts.
The SEC filed the civil complaint on Dec. 17, 2025, in federal court in Delaware against Danh C. Vo, the founder and CEO of VBit Technologies Corp. The agency alleges that Vo and related entities raised about $95.6 million from roughly 6,400 investors through so-called Bitcoin mining hosting agreements .
According to the complaint, investors paid upfront fees in exchange for a share of Bitcoin mining rewards. However, the SEC claims the defendants sold more hosting contracts than they had operational mining machines. As a result, promised mining activity could not match investor expectations .
The SEC further alleges that a significant portion of investor funds was misappropriated for personal use rather than deployed for mining infrastructure. These allegations form the basis for charges under both the Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 .
In its filing, the SEC argues that the hosting agreements qualify as “investment contracts” under the Howey Test. Investors allegedly expected profits from Bitcoin mining while relying entirely on the company’s management to acquire, operate, and maintain the mining equipment .
Because investors did not control the hardware or the mining process, the SEC says the arrangements resemble passive investments rather than commercial service contracts. Therefore, the agency treats these offerings as securities that required proper registration and disclosure .
Importantly, the complaint does not classify Bitcoin or proof-of-work mining itself as a security. Instead, it focuses on the structure of third-party hosting models, especially when companies market them as income-generating products without meaningful investor involvement.
The lawsuit arrives months after SEC staff publicly stated that self-directed Bitcoin mining and standard mining pools generally do not trigger securities laws. That guidance emphasized that miners who directly contribute computing power and receive rewards are not investing in a common enterprise .
However, the VBit case highlights a regulatory boundary. When mining becomes a packaged product sold to passive participants, the legal treatment can change. Consequently, hosted mining providers may face closer scrutiny if their offerings resemble yield products.
For the broader market, the case underscores that regulatory risk often depends on structure, not labels. While Bitcoin mining remains lawful, the SEC is signaling that some hosting models may be regulated like traditional investment schemes if they promise returns driven by managerial efforts rather than direct participation.

