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US Establishes "Five Categories" Framework for Crypto Assets, A Complete Guide to the New Regulatory Framework (Essential Edition)
On March 17, 2026, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) jointly issued an interpretive document numbered 33-11412. The 68-page regulatory framework officially declares the end of a decade-long era of “enforcement over regulation” in U.S. crypto oversight and ushers in a new era of clarity and harmony driven by “Project Crypto.”
This document is not only a rare collaboration between the SEC and CFTC but also the most milestone-guiding document in the history of U.S. crypto regulation. Below is a summarized full analysis:
1. Background: From Conflict to Collaboration — “Project Crypto”
In 2017, the SEC first applied the Howey test to crypto assets through the “The DAO Report.” Over the next ten years, regulation mainly relied on enforcement actions to define asset properties, leaving the market in prolonged uncertainty and controversy.
In early 2025, the SEC established the “Crypto Task Force” and subsequently launched the “Project Crypto” initiative, co-led by SEC Chair Paul S. Atkins and CFTC Chair Michael S. Selig. The goal was to coordinate the authorities of both agencies, establish a unified asset classification system, and provide clear pathways for crypto innovation to stay in the U.S. In January 2026, the project was officially upgraded to a joint SEC-CFTC operation.
2. Asset Classification: The “Five Categories” Logic of Crypto Assets
Based on asset features, uses, and functions, the document divides crypto assets into five major categories, providing the market with clear classification standards for the first time:
3. Innovation: “Separation” and “Dynamic Conversion” of Security Attributes
This is the most groundbreaking legal innovation in the document — SEC’s first acknowledgment that the “security attribute” of crypto assets is not permanent.
“Separation” Mechanism
Three Scenarios for Separation
Issuer fulfills commitments: After completing core management efforts, even if providing non-core maintenance, the asset is no longer bound by the investment contract.
Issuer abandons the project: If publicly announced as abandoned and no longer fulfilling commitments, the asset is outside securities law (though the issuer may still face legal liability for fraud).
Secondary market trading: If subsequent buyers no longer reasonably expect to profit from issuer efforts, the transaction is not a security.
Transparency Recommendations
SEC encourages project teams to disclose roadmap progress and milestones to help the market identify “separation points.”
4. On-Chain Activity Qualitative Analysis: Clearing the Decentralization “Minefield”
For long-standing controversial activities like staking, mining, wrapping, and airdrops, the document provides detailed and favorable interpretations:
Protocol Mining
Protocol Staking
Staking Receipt Tokens
Wrapping Tokens
Airdrops
5. Reinforcing U.S. Leadership
The document concludes with detailed analysis of its economic significance:
Eliminating the “Chilling Effect”: Providing legal clarity reduces business stagnation caused by opaque compliance, encouraging crypto innovation to return to the U.S.
Lowering Compliance Costs: Clear classification and separation pathways significantly reduce legal consulting and regulatory response costs.
Increasing Market Transparency: The new framework requires more detailed disclosures during the “investment contract” phase, better protecting investors.
Promoting Competition and Innovation: Clear rules attract more issuers and entrepreneurs.
Improving Pricing Efficiency: Reduces price distortions caused by uncertainty.
6. Historic Breakthrough in Regulatory Collaboration
Structurally, the document establishes a clear analytical pathway: classify assets, assess transaction structures, and analyze whether the investment relationship persists.
More importantly, this is a rare coordinated outcome between SEC and CFTC on crypto regulation. Previously, the two agencies had long-standing disagreements over “securities vs. commodities.” This joint framework essentially provides a preliminary classification of major asset categories, marking a transition from “agency jurisdiction competition” to a “unified rule-based division of responsibilities.”
This 68-page document not only ends a decade of regulatory chaos but also cements the U.S.'s leadership position in global crypto regulation. For industry practitioners, it is an essential “industry constitution”; for investors, a clear “rights protection guide”; for entrepreneurs, a definitive “compliance roadmap.”
The era of the “Wild West” in crypto assets has officially come to an end.
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