For years, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) defined its relationship with the cryptocurrency industry largely through enforcement actions.
Lawsuits against exchanges, token issuers and crypto firms became the agency’s primary regulatory tool, creating uncertainty over how digital asset businesses were expected to operate.
That approach now appears to be evolving.
The SEC’s latest regulatory agenda includes proposals affecting crypto exchanges, broker-dealers and digital asset market infrastructure, suggesting the agency is beginning to focus on establishing permanent rules rather than relying primarily on litigation.
The industry is asking for clearer rules
The crypto market has changed significantly over the past few years.
When digital assets were dominated by startups and retail investors, many companies argued that regulation should remain limited to encourage innovation.
Today, the landscape looks very different.
Major financial institutions, including asset managers, banks and ETF providers, have entered the sector with billions of dollars under management. Those firms require clear legal frameworks governing custody, trading, market operations and compliance before expanding their crypto businesses.
As institutional participation increases, regulatory clarity has become a competitive advantage rather than an obstacle.
Building market infrastructure instead of pursuing individual cases
The SEC’s current agenda suggests a broader objective than simply prosecuting companies that violate securities laws.
By developing rules for exchanges, broker-dealers and other market participants, the agency appears to be laying the foundation for a more standardized digital asset market.
That distinction is significant.
Enforcement actions address individual disputes after they occur. Rulemaking establishes the operating framework before problems arise, giving companies and investors greater certainty about how the market is expected to function.
For traditional financial institutions considering deeper involvement in digital assets, that predictability could prove more valuable than any single regulatory decision.
Wall Street is becoming a larger part of crypto
The approval of spot Bitcoin ETFs transformed the industry’s relationship with traditional finance.
Large asset managers, custodians and financial service providers now play a central role in the digital asset ecosystem, bringing expectations that closely resemble those of conventional capital markets.
As a result, regulators are increasingly under pressure to create rules capable of integrating cryptocurrencies into the broader financial system instead of treating them as a separate market.
That shift may influence everything from exchange operations to custody standards and future tokenized securities.
What comes next
The SEC’s regulatory agenda does not resolve every legal question surrounding digital assets, nor does it eliminate ongoing debates over token classifications or decentralized finance.
However, it marks an important change in direction.
Rather than defining the crypto industry primarily through court cases, the agency is beginning to define it through market structure.
If that transition continues, the next phase of U.S. crypto regulation may be shaped less by headline lawsuits and more by the rules that determine how digital assets operate alongside traditional financial markets.
