The post SEC Says BTC, ETH, XRP, DOGE & These Crypto Are Not Securities appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has finallyThe post SEC Says BTC, ETH, XRP, DOGE & These Crypto Are Not Securities appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has finally

SEC Says BTC, ETH, XRP, DOGE & These Crypto Are Not Securities

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The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has finally drawn a clear line in the sand for crypto, and, somewhat surprisingly, most major tokens now fall on the “not a security” side of it.

In a new interpretive release, supported by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), the SEC outlined how federal securities laws apply to crypto assets and introduced a joint “token taxonomy” that reshapes how Washington views Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP, Dogecoin, and dozens of other digital assets.

For an industry that has spent more than a decade operating in a fog of regulation by enforcement, this may be the closest thing yet to a formal rulebook.

A new token map: five buckets instead of one big mess

Under the joint SEC-CFTC guidance, crypto assets are divided into five categories:

  • digital commodities
  • digital collectibles
  • digital tools
  • stablecoins
  • digital securities

The first four categories are treated as non-securities by default, while digital securities, essentially tokenized versions of traditional financial instruments such as stocks or bonds: remain subject to federal securities laws.

Digital commodities are assets whose value is tied to a functioning blockchain ecosystem and basic supply-and-demand dynamics. The SEC explicitly listed Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP, and Dogecoin as examples.

Digital collectibles include NFTs and meme-based assets, while digital tools refer to tokens used for access, membership, or utility within a platform.

Compliant payment stablecoins are also generally treated as non-securities, although some stablecoins may still fall under securities law depending on how they are structured and marketed to investors.

The SEC-CFTC framework splits crypto assets into five regulatory categories. Source: CoinPaper.

“Most crypto assets are not securities”: with a catch

SEC Chair Paul Atkins said the interpretation is designed to “provide clear boundaries in clear terms” after more than ten years of regulatory uncertainty.

The guidance clarifies that activities such as Bitcoin-style mining, on-chain staking, and protocol airdrops do not automatically create securities offerings.

This removes one of the largest legal clouds that has hung over core crypto network activities.

The CFTC has also committed to enforcing the Commodity Exchange Act in line with the new interpretation, signaling that the two agencies are finally aligned on who regulates what.

However, there is an important caveat.

Tokens can still become securities if they are sold as part of an investment contract: for example, when developers market a token as a profit-generating investment based on their own managerial efforts.

In other words, the technology itself may not be a security, but the way the token is sold or promoted could still trigger securities laws.

Why BTC, ETH, XRP, DOGE and other majors just got a boost

For large-cap crypto assets, the new framework looks like a major regulatory win.

By explicitly placing BTC, ETH, XRP, DOGE and other leading tokens into the digital commodity category, regulators remove the long-standing question of whether these assets might someday be classified as unregistered securities.

That clarity could make it easier for exchanges to list and trade these assets in the United States.

It may also strengthen the case for spot and derivatives products, since the assets now fall under a commodities-style regulatory framework rather than a patchwork of enforcement actions.

Atkins also floated the idea of potential “harbor exemptions” for early-stage crypto projects.

These would allow startups to experiment with tokens under limits on fundraising size, valuation, and timeframes. Once a network becomes sufficiently decentralized and managerial control fades, the token could transition out of securities status.

The concept would create a clearer path from “security during fundraising” to “non-security once decentralized”, something the industry has been requesting since the early ICO era.

What this means for exchanges, DeFi and investors

For centralized exchanges, the message is mixed but clearer.

Listing and trading digital commodities like Bitcoin and Ethereum now carries far less securities risk. However, tokens that resemble tokenized stocks or investment products will still be regulated like traditional securities.

For DeFi protocols and staking platforms, the guidance offers reassurance that core blockchain functions are not inherently securities offerings.

At the same time, teams raising capital or promoting tokens with profit expectations will still need to consider the Howey test and other securities rules.

For investors, the impact may be psychological as much as legal.

The SEC is no longer implying that “everything except Bitcoin is a security,” and the CFTC is now clearly aligned with that interpretation.

That clarity could attract more institutional capital, support additional regulated products, and potentially reposition the U.S. as a more competitive hub for crypto innovation.

Key milestones in U.S. crypto regulation from the ICO crackdown to the SEC-CFTC token taxonomy. Source: CoinPaper.

A clearer, but not lighter regulatory future

In practice, the new SEC-CFTC framework does not eliminate crypto regulation. Instead, it refines and clarifies it.

Core blockchain networks and utility tokens gain room to operate, while tokenized securities and investment-style fundraising are pulled into a clearer, more traditional regulatory lane.

For an industry that has spent years navigating regulation through lawsuits, that trade-off may be the most predictable regulatory environment crypto has seen so far.

Source: https://coinpaper.com/15519/sec-finally-explains-which-crypto-are-securities-and-which-aren-t

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