Today, at a Senate hearing, Paul Atkins, the Chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission admitted this. He claimed that a federal structure on crypto markets is long overdue. That in itself is a change of direction. The U.S. cryptocurrency regulation was based on enforcement rather than clarity over the years. Now, the tone is changing. What is more important is that Atkins affirmed that regulating bodies are no longer operating in silos.
SEC and CFTC Take Step Towards Co-ordination
Atkins claimed that the SEC and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission will collaborate in order to form a bridge to the overall legislation. This coordination matters. In the past, the dissimilarity between securities and commodities regulation generated regulatory stalemate. This left crypto firms at a crossroads. Innovation slowed. Capital hesitated. At this point, cooperation implies conformity. And conformity unleashes the gates to systematic regulations, instead of jurisprudential questions and answers.
Since the beginning of 2026, Atkins has managed so-called Project Crypto, a joint undertaking of SEC and CFTC aimed to standardize the regulation of digital assets. The project seeks to map jurisdiction effectively. It also tries to align the agency policy to bills that are progressing in Congress. It is worth mentioning that this initiative is in line with such legislations as Digital Asset Market CLARITY Act. The latter bill attempts to clarify the asset classifications and control of regulators. Should it pass, it may transform the U.S. crypto markets in the long run.
Atkins SEC Political Tension
The message was however not received with enthusiasm by all. In the hearing, Elizabeth Warren condemned what she termed as a weakening attitude on crypto enforcement. She brought up issues of donor influence and regulatory relaxation. That reply lays emphasis on a major fact. Regardless of the advancement in regulation, there is still political friction.
The bigger message still remains evident despite the backlash. The regulators in the United States are admitting that crypto is here to stay. Rather, they are ready to encompass it into formal financial law. In the case of markets, this lessens long-term uncertainty. To institutions, it reduces the legal risk. To the builders, it provides them with a better runway. Although it will take a long time to be enacted in legislation, the current testimony is that the tide has turned.
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