SEC Chair Says Agency Can Regulate Crypto Without a New Bill
SEC Chair Paul Atkins said Wednesday that the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission can regulate cryptocurrency markets without waiting for Congress to pass new legislation. Atkins made the comment during remarks flagged by Wealth Management, saying regulators retain enough existing authority to fill gaps left by absent crypto-specific laws.
The statement arrives as the CLARITY Act, a bill that would divide cryptocurrency oversight between the SEC and the CFTC, moves through Capitol Hill at an uncertain pace.
What Atkins Said
Atkins told attendees that the two agencies can coordinate to cover the regulatory landscape even if the CLARITY Act does not pass this session, according to a Wealth Management report. He added a caveat that agency-only action carries a risk: rules written without statutory backing are harder to defend over time and may not hold up against future legal challenges.
That concern about “future-proofing” was the qualifying note inside an otherwise constructive message about regulatory readiness.
The CLARITY Act would formally delineate which digital assets fall under SEC jurisdiction as securities and which fall under the CFTC as commodities. Without it, the boundary remains contested, leaving exchanges and token issuers to operate under shifting enforcement posture rather than codified law.
Background
The SEC’s stance on cryptocurrency has shifted considerably since Atkins took over as chair in early 2026, replacing Gary Gensler, whose tenure was defined by aggressive enforcement against major exchanges including Coinbase (COIN) and Binance.
Atkins arrived with a stated preference for clearer rules over litigation-first tactics. His Wednesday comment extends that posture by signaling that the agency will not wait indefinitely for Congress before establishing workable frameworks. Bitcoin (BTC) and broader cryptocurrency markets have tracked regulatory sentiment closely this year, with prices sensitive to shifts in Washington’s tone.
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What to Watch
The CLARITY Act’s progress through committee will determine whether Atkins follows through on agency-only coordination or defers to legislation.
Industry groups have pushed for statutory clarity precisely because Atkins’ own concern about future-proofing is well-founded: an SEC rule built on existing authority without congressional backing can be reversed by a subsequent administration or challenged in court. The coming weeks in Congress will signal whether the two-regulator model gets a legal foundation or remains a policy preference.
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