In a conference room somewhere in Washington, complete with fluorescent lights, bad coffee, and stacks of legal briefs, the phrase that the cryptocurrency community has been waiting for nearly a decade to read was finally typed.
On March 17, 2026, the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission jointly released interpretive guidance that attempts to offer a nearly official response to the question that has troubled every token issuer, exchange operator, and retail investor since Bitcoin started making headlines: which of these digital assets are actually securities?
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Agencies Involved | U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) & Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) |
| Date of Release | March 17, 2026 |
| Type of Guidance | Joint Interpretive Release (not formal rulemaking) |
| SEC Chairman | Paul S. Atkins |
| CFTC Chairman | Michael S. Selig |
| Preceding Initiative | SEC Crypto Task Force (est. January 2025); Project Crypto (joint SEC-CFTC, January 2026) |
| Token Categories Defined | Digital Commodities, Digital Collectibles, Digital Tools, Stablecoins, Digital Securities |
| Legal Weight | Not binding on courts; subject to judicial challenge |
| Related Legislation | H.R. 3633 – Digital Asset Market Clarity Act of 2025 (passed House, pending Senate) |
| Reference Links | SEC Official Interpretation – SEC.gov | CFTC Official Website – CFTC.gov |
According to this advice, there aren’t as many short answers as you might think. And anyone utilizing a DeFi protocol, storing cryptocurrency in a personal wallet, or trying to establish a compliant exchange in the US needs to know this.
Formally referred to as “The Release,” it doesn’t arrive quietly. It expands upon the now-famous Hinman Speech from 2018, when William Hinman, the SEC Director at the time, stood at a podium and told the industry that Ether and Bitcoin weren’t securities. The SEC’s 2019 Framework for digital asset analysis is obviously replaced by it. That speech contained no official directives. It had no legal force behind it. But for years, it shaped the industry’s self-perception, becoming a kind of unofficial scripture in a field that desperately needed an authoritative signal.
The new joint guidance aims to replace that disjointed collection of task force memos and speeches with a rational five-category taxonomy. Digital commodities, digital collectibles, digital tools, stablecoins that comply with the GENIUS Act, and digital securities all have distinct regulatory implications. The shortcomings of the taxonomy seem to be recognized by the SEC.
The organization has already requested input from the public and stated that it may enhance the framework. There’s something almost rejuvenating about that admission. A single document might not be able to fully convey the complexity of what cryptocurrency has developed into.
The fact that secondary-market transactions in well-established, decentralized cryptocurrency assets will normally not be considered securities transactions under this framework may be the most immediately applicable lesson for average investors. Buying Bitcoin or Ether on an exchange does not qualify as a securities offering, according to the Commission. Compared to the enforcement-first approach of the previous administration, which left exchanges and individual investors in a state of prolonged legal uncertainty, this is a significant shift.
How the courts will handle all of this is still unknown, though. Almost defensively, the Release makes sure to emphasize that it is not a formal rulemaking and does not have legal force. Federal judges will still render their own judgments. State laws pertaining to securities are still in force.
Private rights of action are unaffected. It appears from reading the document that the agencies are aware that they are building a bridge over unresolved issues. SEC Chairman Paul Atkins described it as just that—a bridge—in the absence of comprehensive market structure legislation from Congress.
Other areas covered by the guidance that have been in regulatory shadow for a long time include protocol mining, staking, liquid staking, wrapping, and airdrops. These activities are usually not regarded as investment contracts under the new framework. For the staking sector in particular, which has grown to be a multibillion-dollar industry, this is a huge release. Whether it can survive scrutiny is yet to be determined. Courts have previously surprised regulators.
The guidance’s failure to adequately address the question of who exactly counts as a “issuer” in the decentralized world of DAOs and blockchain foundations is one of its major flaws. The Howey test, a legal standard that the SEC has long used to determine whether something qualifies as an investment contract, depends on identifying a party whose managerial efforts investors are depending on.
In a truly decentralized protocol, it is difficult to identify that party. Decentralization is crucial to the analysis, according to the Release, but it doesn’t explain how a DAO developer can avoid inadvertently turning into a “issuer” by just trying to adhere to the rules. That will lead to comments. A lot of them.
As someone who has followed the cryptocurrency regulatory landscape through its most turbulent years, I find it incredibly relieving when two major agencies reach a consensus on anything. Guidance that contradicted itself, enforcement actions that often felt arbitrary, and an industry that increasingly moved its most innovative work offshore due to the unpredictability of the domestic regulatory environment were the hallmarks of the previous decade. Whether this release will bring those projects back onshore is still up in the air.
The clarity offered may be sincere, but its durability is uncertain. Congress is still debating conflicting legislation. Courts will keep coming to their own conclusions. The Commission itself may amend the guidelines without formal rulemaking.
However, something has changed for the time being. The lines have been drawn in spite of their flaws, acknowledged shortcomings, and potential for improvement. For the average person holding cryptocurrency on an exchange or staking tokens via a protocol, the practical reality is that, for the first time in a long time, the regulatory framework supporting your wallet has somewhat strengthened.

