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SEC’s Atkins says most crypto assets are not securities;  plans purpose-fit disclosures for crypto securities including for so-called ‘initial coin offerings,’ ‘airdrops’ and network rewards.”; could allow innovation with ‘super-apps’

August 1, 2025 //  by Finnovate

SEC Chairman Paul Atkins said his agency is launching “Project Crypto” with an aim to make a quick start on the new crypto policies urged by President Donald Trump. Atkins said the effort will be rooted in the recommendations of the President’s Working Group report issued Wednesday by the White House. He described it as “a commission-wide initiative to modernize the securities rules and regulations to enable America’s financial markets to move on-chain.” “I have directed the commission staff to draft clear and simple rules of the road for crypto asset distributions, custody, and trading for public notice and comment,” Atkins said. “While the commission staff works to finalize these regulations, the commission and its staff will in the coming months consider using interpretative, exemptive and other authorities to make sure that archaic rules and regulations do not smother innovation and entrepreneurship in America. Despite what the SEC has said in the past, most crypto assets are not securities,” Atkins said. Atkins suggested his agency will move to begin answering those questions now, working on “clear guidelines that market participants can use to determine whether a crypto asset is a security or subject to an investment contract.” For crypto securities, he said he’s “asked staff to propose purpose-fit disclosures, exemptions, and safe harbors, including for so-called ‘initial coin offerings,’ ‘airdrops’ and network rewards.” Atkins said he means to “allow market participants to innovate with ‘super-apps'” that offer a “broad range of products and services under one roof with a single license.”

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