The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is doubling down on its ambitious Project Crypto initiative as it seeks to reverse years of digital asset companies relocating overseas due to regulatory uncertainty.
On X, he wrote, “An entire generation of digital asset innovation developed outside the U.S., not because American entrepreneurs lacked the ambition, or American investors lacked the appetite, but because American regulators lacked the will.”

The SEC now wants to change that by creating what Atkins describes as “basic fairness and common sense” in applying securities laws to digital assets.
Last year, SEC Chairman Paul Atkins first announced “Project Crypto,” a major initiative to overhaul US securities laws for digital asset markets. The program aimed to make the United States the leading global crypto hub.
As previously reported by Cryptopolitan the SEC now expects the initiative’s implementation to pave the way for greater levels of compliant crypto activity nationwide. Atkins even added that U.S. crypto developers were never short on ideas or investment, only on regulators prepared to foster innovation.
Based on the traditional Howey test framework, the Project Crypto initiative establishes a clear framework for token classification.
The SEC aims to define clear regulatory boundaries and replace the guessing system that was at risk of litigation. The previous framework, often referred to as “regulation by enforcement,” required crypto firms to determine the compliance obligations following legal action.
Many companies were waiting until they received a Wells notice to find out what regulators thought of their actions.
Another major highlight of the initiative is its plan to create regulatory carve-outs for certain crypto activities. These exemptions could apply to airdrops and network incentives such as staking rewards.
The initiative includes exemptions for brand-new businesses. Atkins explained that new companies could start operating if they report to the SEC regularly, use verified user pools, and build safety rules right into the tokens using systems like ERC-3643.
So far, he has presented the initiative as a corrective measure for the regulatory pressures that drove U.S. digital asset firms abroad. Before, many founders chose friendlier hubs like Dubai, Switzerland, or the Cayman Islands over a challenging U.S. market.
In a press release last November, he commented, “I described ‘Project Crypto’ as our effort to match the energy of American innovators with a regulatory framework worthy of them.”
Additionally, the initiative incorporates interagency coordination with the CFTC, indicating a shift toward a unified federal strategy rather than a jurisdictional dispute over token classification. Atkins also noted that the SEC’s plan will work alongside new stablecoin laws from Congress. Even though he did not name specific tokens, this connection suggests the new rules will likely affect the most popular digital assets.
Moreover, the initiative also addresses trading venues, custodial services, and on-chain software architectures. It proposes that broker-dealers operating alternative trading systems should be permitted to facilitate non-security digital assets alongside digital asset securities, traditional equities, staking, and lending services under an optimized licensing framework.
Ideally, Project Crypto is a direct response to the President’s Working Group’s call for a cleaner approach to crypto rules.
Still, Project Crypto is still a work in progress. The SEC still needs to release proposed rules, gather public feedback, and then decide whether the initiative will work.
Until formal rules are adopted, Project Crypto is still a statement of regulatory intent– not a binding policy. And yet it is the greatest evidence so far that U.S. regulators are moving toward a more predictable system for digital assets.
The commission also recently launched a token taxonomy based on the long-standing Howey test for investment contracts, noting that securities laws have clear limits.
This taxonomy categorizes digital assets into five categories; only one is considered a security, and specifies how regulators will approach airdrops, protocol mining, staking rewards, and token wrapping.
Legal experts and market participants broadly view Project Crypto as the most comprehensive attempt yet to make the United States competitive in digital finance.
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