The SEC has clarified its position on how crypto assets should be classified. For brokers, that clarity comes with a new layer of responsibility. SEC Chairman PaulThe SEC has clarified its position on how crypto assets should be classified. For brokers, that clarity comes with a new layer of responsibility. SEC Chairman Paul

SEC Clarifies Crypto Rules, Shifting Responsibility to Brokers

2026/03/18 18:17
3 min read
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The SEC has clarified its position on how crypto assets should be classified. For brokers, that clarity comes with a new layer of responsibility.

SEC Chairman Paul Atkins presented the long-awaited token taxonomy, developed in coordination with the CFTC. The new rules confirm that tokens meeting the definition of investment contracts remain subject to securities regulation, while other categories, such as payment stablecoins, digital commodities, and collectibles, fall outside securities rules.

For much of the brokerage industry, this framework defines where brokers can participate without triggering full securities rules. But the guidance also shifts how risk is managed.

From Legal Uncertainty to Operational Responsibility

For years, the main risk for brokers was unpredictability. A token could be listed and later reclassified, exposing firms to enforcement action.

That risk has now moved into day-to-day operations. The SEC made clear that a token’s status can change depending on how it is marketed and used.

An asset initially treated as a non-security may fall under securities rules if it is presented as part of an investment offering with an expectation of profit.

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This means classification is no longer fixed. A token’s regulatory status can evolve as its ecosystem develops or as its positioning changes. In practice, this turns classification into a continuous process rather than a one-time listing decision.

Brokers will need to monitor how assets are used and be able to explain their classification if regulators question it.

Safe Harbor Raises the Stakes

SEC Chairman Paul Atkins

The proposed four-year “safe harbor” for crypto startups adds another layer. The idea is to allow projects to launch and raise capital under lighter requirements for a defined period, provided they meet certain conditions. If implemented, this could increase the volume of new token issuance.

As Atkins framed it: “Such a safe harbor would provide crypto innovators bespoke pathways to raise capital in the US while providing appropriate investor protections.”

For brokers, that means more assets entering the market at an earlier stage, when classification is less settled. Participation in such offerings may also require closer tracking of how projects evolve over time.

If a token later meets the definition of a security, earlier assumptions may come under review.

A Shift in Where Risk Sits

The SEC’s approach gives the market more structure. It also changes where decisions are made. Previously, much of the uncertainty sat with regulators. Now, more of it sits with market participants.

Brokers will have to move from reacting to regulatory action toward making and defending classification decisions in real time. The rules are clearer. The margin for error may be narrower.

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