- The newly formed Crypto Task Force will hold five roundtables, starting March 21, 2025, to clarify securities status in the crypto industry.
- Regulators are shifting from strict enforcement to dialogue, aiming for clearer rules through discussions with industry leaders in upcoming roundtable sessions.
The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) looks to be gearing up for a new chapter in its regulatory approach to the cryptocurrency industry. Following years of enforcement-based rules, the SEC is currently scheduled to convene a “Spring Sprint Towards Crypto Clarity” roundtable conference.
The event is scheduled to take place over five sessions, with the first meeting on March 21, which will discuss defining securities in the crypto space.
SCOOP: The @SECGov Crypto Task Force is getting ready to hold a series of roundtables with industry participants entitled “Spring Sprint Towards Crypto Clarity,” two people familiar with the matter tell me. The first of the five planned roundtables will be held on March 21 at…
— Eleanor Terrett (@EleanorTerrett) February 28, 2025
From Enforcement to Engagement: The SEC’s Changing Stance
Although the SEC was once known for being forceful in bringing crypto companies to justice, its strategy now seems to be more receptive to conversation. Besides that, the SEC has stopped looking at numerous big corporations in the sector recently.
As previously mentioned in our report, Gemini was at last cleared from a 699-day probe free from additional legal action. Furthermore, closed without any legal action were investigations into OpenSea, Robinhood, and Uniswap.
More shockingly, the SEC even dropped its action against Coinbase, seen as one of the most important rulings in the conflict between authorities and the crypto sector. Under pressure from several groups seeking regulatory clarification without always ending up in court, the actions have spurred conjecture that there is a change in strategy inside the SEC.
SEC Faces Another Setback in Crypto Crackdown
On the other hand, the SEC suffered yet another blow when a federal court dismissed its lawsuit against Hex founder Richard Heart. The SEC charged Heart with running an illicit crypto offering and defrauding investors of $12.1 million, used to purchase luxury items including the biggest black diamond in the world.
Judge Carol Bagley Amon in Brooklyn, however, dismissed the case because Heart’s activities lacked sufficient legal link to US jurisdiction. The ruling reflects yet another SEC loss in its attempts to tighten control via legal methods.
Meme Coins Get Legal Clarity at Last
In another move, the SEC has at last offered new direction on the legal status of meme coins—a subset of tokens sometimes dismissed as a joke or internet craze.
In its statement, the SEC underlined that as meme coins offer neither a return, ownership rights, nor representation of future income, they do not satisfy the requirements for securities. Stated differently, assets like Shiba Inu or Dogecoin are more like digital collectibles whose value is just dependent on market demand and speculation.
For community-driven initiatives long threatened by the SEC, this choice could be considered as an uplifting moment. On the other hand, a major issue still stands: Should meme coins fall outside the securities category, does this create access to more speculative tokens that would endanger inexperienced investors? Alternatively, is this a hint that the SEC is beginning to choose its fights more deliberately?