Regulation & Policy
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The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) have signed a coordination agreement aimed at aligning oversight of financial markets and digital assets.
The agencies formalized the arrangement through a memorandum of understanding (MoU) designed to improve coordination on rulemaking, supervision, and enforcement in areas where their regulatory authority overlaps.
The move reflects efforts by U.S. regulators to address longstanding fragmentation in the oversight of traditional and digital asset markets.
Alongside the agreement, the SEC and CFTC launched a Joint Harmonization Initiative to coordinate regulatory approaches across several key areas.
These include:
Product definitions and classifications
Clearing and margin frameworks
Reporting requirements for intermediaries and funds
Oversight of trading venues
According to the regulators, the initiative aims to harmonize regulatory frameworks and provide more seamless financial market oversight as the digital asset sector evolves.
Part of the initiative will focus on creating a “fit-for-purpose” regulatory framework for crypto assets and emerging technologies, an issue that has remained unresolved in U.S. regulatory policy.
SEC Chairman Paul Atkins said the agreement is intended to address longstanding challenges caused by overlapping jurisdiction.
“For decades, regulatory turf wars, duplicative agency registrations, and different sets of regulations between the SEC and CFTC have stifled innovation and pushed market participants to other jurisdictions,” Atkins said in a statement.
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CFTC Chairman Michael Selig added that coordinated policymaking could improve regulatory clarity across financial markets as new digital asset products emerge.
Industry participants say closer coordination between the agencies could help reduce regulatory uncertainty that has slowed institutional participation in the crypto sector.
Steven Wu, chief operating officer at Clearpool, said the agreement signals a new phase for the digital asset industry.
Uncertainty around how tokens are classified and which regulator has jurisdiction has historically made it difficult for firms to design new financial products with confidence, Wu said.
He added that stronger regulatory alignment could create a more predictable framework for builders, potentially encouraging institutional capital that has remained cautious due to regulatory ambiguity.
Wu also noted that boundaries between spot markets, derivatives, and tokenized financial products are increasingly blurred, forcing many firms to interact with both regulators simultaneously.
Greater regulatory alignment could also streamline compliance processes, Wu said, potentially moving the system toward “substituted compliance,” where meeting requirements under one agency could satisfy the other.
This could reduce duplicated regulatory processes and accelerate the launch of compliant financial products.
For global firms deciding where to develop digital asset infrastructure, clearer regulatory coordination could make the United States more competitive compared to offshore jurisdictions.
Samar Sen, head of international markets at Talos, said institutional market participants often operate simultaneously across spot, derivatives, and tokenized markets.
As a result, fragmented regulation can create operational friction by forcing firms to reconcile different supervisory expectations and reporting frameworks for similar activities.
Closer coordination between the SEC and CFTC could reduce these duplications and provide the regulatory clarity institutions need to scale digital asset products, Sen said.
The agreement could also prepare regulators for a more unified framework if U.S. lawmakers pass broader crypto market structure legislation, which has been under discussion in Congress.
By coordinating interpretations and policymaking now, the SEC and CFTC may be positioning themselves to implement future legislation more efficiently as digital asset markets continue to mature.




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